Use of nested hypervisors by a resource-exchange system to enhance data and operational security and to facilitate component installation

ABSTRACT

The current document is directed a resource-exchange system that facilitates resource exchange and sharing among computing facilities. The currently disclosed methods and systems employ efficient, distributed-search methods and subsystems within distributed computer systems that include large numbers of geographically distributed data centers to locate resource-provider computing facilities that match the resource needs of resource-consumer computing-facilities based on attribute values associated with the needed resources, the resource providers, and the resource consumers. Nested-hypervisor technology is employed, in disclosed implementations, to guarantee data security for, and prevent monitoring of operational states and characteristics of, resource-consumer virtual machines and virtual applications while they execute above leased computational resources in remote computing facilities. Nested-hypervisor technology is additionally employed to facilitate installation of resource-exchange system management components in participant computing facilities as well as to guarantee data and operational security for the management components.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 15/285,355, filed Oct. 4, 2016, which claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 62/380,450, filed Aug. 28, 2016.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The current document is directed to distributed computer systems, distributed-computer-system management subsystems, and, in particular, to an automated resource-exchange system that mediates sharing of computational resources among computing facilities and that uses nested hypervisors to provide data and operational security for resource-consumer-participant virtual-machine and virtual-application execution in resource-provider-participant computing facilities and to facilitate installation of resource-exchange-system management components in participant computing facilities.

BACKGROUND

Computer systems and computational technologies have steadily evolved, during the past 70 years, from initial vacuum-tube-based systems that lacked operating systems, compilers, network connectivity, and most other common features of modern computing systems to vast distributed computing systems that include large numbers of multi-processor servers, data-storage appliances, and multiple layers of internal communications networks interconnected by various types of wide-area networks and that provide computational resources to hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, or more remote users. As operating systems, and virtualization layers have been developed and refined, over the years, in parallel with the advancements in computer hardware and networking, the robust execution environments provided by distributed operating systems and virtualization layers now provide a foundation for development and evolution of many different types of distributed application programs, including distributed database-management systems, distributed client-server applications, and distributed web-based service-provision applications. This has resulted in a geometric increase in the complexity of distributed computer systems, as a result of which owners, administrators, and users of distributed computer systems and consumers of computational resources provided by distributed computing systems increasingly rely on automated and semi-automated management and computational-resource-distribution subsystems to organize the activities of many users and computational-resource consumers and to control access to, and use of, computational resources within distributed computer systems. In many cases, greater overall computational efficiency can be obtained for a large number of distributed computing facilities when resources can be shared and exchanged among the distributed computing facilities. However, currently, effective resource sharing and exchange among computing facilities of multiple organizations is generally difficult or impossible, for a number of reasons. One reason is that shared resources expose a variety of different types of security issues, including data-security issues and operational-security issues. These issues need to be addressed in order to obtain the greater computational efficiencies possible with computational-resource sharing and exchange.

SUMMARY

The current document is directed a resource-exchange system that facilitates resource exchange and sharing among computing facilities. The currently disclosed methods and systems employ efficient, distributed-search methods and subsystems within distributed computer systems that include large numbers of geographically distributed data centers to locate resource-provider computing facilities that match the resource needs of resource-consumer computing-facilities based on attribute values associated with the needed resources, the resource providers, and the resource consumers. Nested-hypervisor technology is employed, in disclosed implementations, to guarantee data security for, and prevent monitoring of operational states and characteristics of, resource-consumer virtual machines and virtual applications while they execute above leased computational resources in remote computing facilities. Nested-hypervisor technology is additionally employed to facilitate installation of resource-exchange system management components in participant computing facilities as well as to guarantee data and operational security for the management components.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIGS. 1, 2A-E, and-3 illustrate the problem domain addressed by the methods and systems disclosed in the current document.

FIG. 4 provides a general architectural diagram for various types of computers.

FIG. 5 illustrates an Internet-connected distributed computer system.

FIG. 6 illustrates cloud computing.

FIG. 7 illustrates generalized hardware and software components of a general-purpose computer system, such as a general-purpose computer system having an architecture similar to that shown in FIG. 1.

FIGS. 8A-D illustrate several types of virtual machine and virtual-machine execution environments.

FIG. 9 illustrates an OVF package.

FIG. 10 illustrates virtual data centers provided as an abstraction of underlying physical-data-center hardware components.

FIG. 11 illustrates virtual-machine components of a VI-management-server and physical servers of a physical data center above which a virtual-data-center interface is provided by the VI-management-server.

FIG. 12 illustrates a cloud-director level of abstraction.

FIG. 13 illustrates virtual-cloud-connector nodes (“VCC nodes”) and a VCC server, components of a distributed system that provides multi-cloud aggregation and that includes a cloud-connector server and cloud-connector nodes that cooperate to provide services that are distributed across multiple clouds.

FIGS. 14A-C illustrate components and general operation of the distributed-search methods and subsystems.

FIGS. 15A-C illustrate certain of the information and data entities used within the distributed-search methods and subsystems.

FIGS. 16A-B illustrate certain types of data maintained and used within local instances of the distributed-search subsystem and within a distributed-search engine.

FIG. 17 is a high-level diagram of the distributed-search engine.

FIG. 18 illustrates various messages and data structures used during execution of a distributed search by the distributed-search subsystem, including an active search context, a search request, a search-request response, and information requests and responses.

FIGS. 19A-B illustrate operation of the evaluator queues and master queue within an active search context.

FIGS. 20A-E illustrate the concept of resource exchange among cloud-computing facilities, data centers, and other computing facilities.

FIGS. 21A-B illustrate implementation of the automated computational-resource brokerage within multiple distributed computing facilities.

FIG. 22 illustrates a general implementation of the cloud-exchange engine (2105 in FIG. 21B).

FIGS. 23A-G illustrate, for one implementation of the resource-exchange system, the process by which resource needs are communicated from resource consumers to resource providers, resource providers offer resources to resource consumers, one or more resource providers are selected for provision of particular resources, and resources are allocated on behalf of resource consumers by the one or more selected resource providers.

FIGS. 24A-C show the states associated with a resource exchange, and the transitions between the states, that define the VM placement and execution process for the described implementation of the cloud-exchange system and that define the lifecycle of a resource-exchange context and the particular resource exchange represented by the resource-exchange context.

FIG. 25 illustrates a nested hypervisor using illustration conventions similar to those used in FIG. 8A.

FIG. 26 illustrates a computer system that includes a nested hypervisor, using simplified illustration conventions.

FIG. 27 illustrates multiple control domains within a computer system made possible by hypervisor nesting.

FIG. 28 illustrates implementation of two separately managed computational-resource domains within a single distributed computer system.

FIG. 29 illustrates dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology.

FIGS. 30A-B illustrate a first security issue related to nested hypervisors and an approach that addresses the first security issue.

FIGS. 31A-B illustrate a second security issue related to nested hypervisors and an approach that addresses the second security issue.

FIG. 32 illustrates a potential security leak between management domains associated with console functionality provided by hypervisors.

FIG. 33 provides a control-flow diagram for a nested-hypervisor monitor that is run within the second management domain to ensure that snapshot operations representing potential security leaks to the first management domain are quickly detected.

FIGS. 34A-C illustrate two additional types of resource transactions that can be carried out by the above-described cloud-exchange system in addition to simple transfer or migration of resource-consumer virtual machines to resource providers for execution within resource-provider management domains.

FIG. 35 illustrates 4 different choices that a resource consumer may select from when faced with the need for allocating computational resources to run additional virtual machines.

FIGS. 36A-E illustrate an additional advantage associated with the use of nested hypervisors by the cloud-exchange system.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS

The current document is directed to a resource exchange that facilitates resource sharing among multiple computing facilities. In a first subsection, below, an overview of the problem domain addressed by the currently disclosed methods and systems is provided. A second subsection provides an overview of computer systems, virtualization layers, and distributed computer systems. A third subsection describes a distributed search engine and a fourth subsection provides a brief description of a distributed resource-exchange system that employs the distributed search engine and that aggregates a large number of physical and virtual data centers to create a distributed, multi-organization computing, resource-exchange, and resource-sharing facility. A fifth subsection discusses the life cycle of a resource exchange as represented by a resource-exchange context and a sixth subsection disclosed use of nested hypervisors by the resource-exchange system.

The Problem Domain Addressed by the Currently Disclosed Methods and Systems

FIGS. 1-3 illustrate the problem domain addressed by the methods and systems disclosed in the current document. FIG. 1 shows a large number of virtual and physical data centers spread throughout a large geographical area. Each virtual/physical data center may include hundreds to thousands of individual computer systems along with internal networking and pooled mass-storage resources. Although only 30 virtual/physical data centers are shown in FIG. 1, hundreds to thousands of virtual/physical data centers may be spread throughout a large geographical area. As shown in FIG. 1, the virtual/physical data centers are connected to regional communications hubs 102-107, which are, in turn, interconnected through wide-area networking 108. Each virtual/physical data center is represented by a rectangle, such as virtual/physical data center 110. Each rectangle representing a virtual/physical data center is additionally labeled with an indication of the organization that owns and maintains the virtual/physical data center, such as the indication “O1” within the rectangle representing virtual/physical data center 110. Certain organizations own and maintain only a single virtual/physical data center, including organization “O18,” which owns and maintains virtual/physical data center 112. Other organizations own and maintain multiple virtual/physical data centers, including organization “O1,” which owns and maintains virtual/physical data centers 110 and 114-116.

Currently, an organization can supplement the computational resources of the organization's one or more virtual/physical data centers by contracting for computational resources from cloud-computing facilities. An organization can configure virtual machines within a cloud-computing facility to remotely run applications and services on behalf of the organization. Use of computational resources provided by cloud-computing facilities allows an organization to expand and contract computational resources in response to increasing and decreasing demand for the services provided by the organization, without purchasing additional physical computer systems to satisfy increased demand and without powering down physical computer systems to lessen ongoing costs associated with spare capacity. The advent of cloud computing has enabled organizations to make use of flexible and dynamic remote computational resources to obtain needed computational resources without needing to purchase, maintain, and manage additional computational resources on-site. However, third-party cloud-computing facilities do not fully address the computational-resource needs of organizations, fail to address the recurring problem of spare capacity within private virtual/physical data centers, and fail to provide seamless migration of virtual machines back and forth between resource consumers and resource providers as well as seamless extension of a resource-consumer's private virtual-machine execution environment into the cloud-based domain of resource providers.

It should be emphasized that the problem domain addressed by the currently disclosed methods and systems is, in general, one of computational efficiency. As discussed below, the automated resource-exchange system, in which the currently disclosed methods and systems are employed, facilitates sharing and exchange of computational resources among very large numbers of virtual/physical data centers that are owned, maintained, and managed by large numbers of different organizations. The resource-exchange system effectively aggregates portions of the computational resources of the large number of virtual/physical data centers for use by organizations in need of additional computational resources. As a result, the large numbers of virtual/physical data centers, as a whole, can achieve significantly greater computational efficiencies through resource exchange and sharing. In other words, the resource-exchange system provides a means for partially aggregating multiple virtual/physical data centers and for increasing the computational efficiency of the partially aggregated virtual/physical data centers.

In the implementations discussed in the current application, the resource-exchange system partially aggregates multiple virtual/physical data centers by providing a largely automated auction-based marketplace in which computational resources are advertised for lease by resource sellers and leased from resource sellers by resource buyers. In other words, the resource-exchange system achieves computational efficiencies through computational-resource transactions. In the described implementations, these transactions involve financial exchanges between buyers and sellers. However, the financial exchanges are used to simplify the complex problems associated with matching buyers to sellers and sellers to buyers. Similar computational efficiencies can be alternatively obtained using more abstract credit exchanges, rather than financial exchanges or by directly trading different types of computational resources and services. However, since many of the various considerations and constraints associated with leasing computational resources and with other types of resource exchanges are naturally expressed in terms of financial costs and benefits, use of financial exchanges represents a significant computational efficiency for the resource-exchange system. The primary goal for creating and operating the resource-exchange system is, despite the use of financial transactions, to increase the overall efficiencies related to owning, maintaining, and the managing virtual/physical data centers rather than to create a new type of financial market.

FIGS. 2A-E illustrate an example of a cost-efficiency increase for a virtual/physical data center made possible by the resource-exchange system. In FIG. 2A, the virtual/physical data center 202 is represented as a large rectangle containing numerous physical server computers, including server 204. In FIGS. 2A-E, multiple ellipses, such as ellipses 206, are used to indicate that a particular row of servers includes many additional servers not explicitly shown in the figures. In the numerical examples that follow, each of the ellipses represents seven servers that are not shown in the figures. Each server, including server 204, is generally shown as including a first unshaded portion, such as portion 208 of server 204, representing unused server resources and a second shaded portion, such as second portion 210, representing currently used server resources. Server 204 is currently being used at 80% of the server's total capacity. In this example, servers are generally loaded to 80% capacity. In the example of FIGS. 2A-E, the organization managing the virtual/physical data center 202 intends to purchase an additional 10 servers due to an expected low price point for servers. Three different strategies for purchasing the 10 additional servers are shown, in FIGS. 2A-B, as strategies A 212, B 214, and C 216.

According to strategy A, the 10 additional servers 220-222 are immediately purchased and installed in the virtual/physical data center 212. Tasks running within the virtual/physical data center 212 are redistributed among the now 40 servers running within the virtual/physical data center. Redistribution of the tasks lowers the use of each server to 60% of capacity, as can be seen by comparing the size of the unshaded portion 224 and shaded portion 226 of server 204 in the virtual/physical data center illustrating strategy A 212 to the unshaded portion 208 and shaded portion 210 of server 204 in the initial 30-server virtual/physical data center 202.

Purchasing the 10 additional servers according to strategy B involves immediately purchasing the 10 additional servers 230-232 but leaving them powered down until there is additional demand within the virtual/physical data center for additional computational resources. Purchasing the 10 additional servers according to strategy C involves purchasing one additional server 234 and waiting to purchase a second additional server 235 until the first additional server 234 approaches use at 80% of capacity.

FIG. 2C illustrates the costs incurred at successive time points by the organization when additional servers are purchased according to strategies A, B, and C. The cost calculations are approximate and based on a coarse, 5-day granularity, but nonetheless relative accurately illustrate the cost implications of the three different strategies. For this simple example, there are four different types of costs associated with acquiring and running servers: (1) the cost of running a server 236, which includes power and maintenance costs, estimated at five dollars per day; (2) the cost of housing the server within the data center 237, estimated to be 1 dollar per day; (3) the cost of purchasing a new server 238, $800 at time t₁ (239 in table 240), with purchase-cost increases at subsequent time intervals shown in table 240; and (4) the cost of installing a server in the data center 241, estimated at $200 for installing a single server 242, but less per server as the number of servers installed at a single time point increases, as shown in table 243. In the current example, each interval between successive time points represents five days 244. The initial system includes 30 servers 245 and thus incurs a cost of $150 per day to run the servers and a cost of $30 per day to house the servers. In the lower portion of FIG. 2C 246, the accumulated costs for the data center at successive intervals t₁, t₂, . . . , t₆ are shown for strategy A 247, strategy B 248, and strategy C 249. These costs assume that the purchase of the 10 additional servers begins at time point t₁, 5 days following an initial time point t₀. For strategy A, at time point t₁, the cost for running the 40 servers 250 is $200 per day, the cost for housing the servers 251 is $40 per day, the cost for purchasing the 10 additional servers 252 is $8000, according to table 240, and the cost of installing the 10 additional servers 253 is $1400, according to table 243. The total cost accumulated since time point t₀ 253 is $900, which is the cost of running the initial virtual/physical data center 202 per day, $180, multiplied by 5 days. For strategy A at time point t₂, the total cost accumulated since time point t₀ 255 is $11,500, which includes the total cost 254 of $900 accumulated up to time point t₁ along with the price of purchasing and installing the 10 additional servers and 5 times the daily cost of running the servers, $240×5=$1200. As shown in FIG. 2C, by time point t₆, the total accumulated cost 256 of strategy A is $16,300, the total accumulated cost 257 of strategy B is $15,300, and the total accumulated cost 258 of strategy C is $12,400. However, the rate of increase in total-accumulated-cost for strategy C is much steeper than those for strategies A and B.

FIG. 2D illustrates a fourth strategy D for purchasing the 10 additional servers made possible by the resource-exchange system. According to the fourth strategy D, the 10 additional servers 260-262 are immediately purchased and installed. However, rather than redistributing tasks within the virtual/physical data center, as in strategy A, the organization managing virtual/physical data center 202 advertises the availability of computational-resource leases to other organizations participating in the marketplace provided by the resource-exchange system. As a result, within a reasonably short period of time, the new additional servers are operating at 80% of capacity 263-2652 executing virtual machines on behalf of remote computational-resource leasing organizations. Because the organization managing virtual/physical data center 202 is leasing the 10 additional servers, there is a negative cost, or revenue 266, associated with the 10 additional servers. Using the same illustration conventions as used in FIG. 2C, the costs associated with strategy D are shown at successive time points 267-271. By comparing these costs to those for strategies A, B, and C, shown in FIG. 2C, the rate of increase in total-accumulated-cost for strategy D is much flatter than those for strategies A, B, and C.

FIG. 2E shows a plot of the total accumulated cost vs. time for the four strategies A, B, C, and D, discussed above with reference to FIGS. 2A-D. Clearly, after less than 30 days, strategy D, represented by cost curve 272, provides a significantly lower accumulated cost then strategies A, B, and C, represented by cost curves 273-275. The resource-exchange system has provided a way for the organization managing virtual/physical data center 202 to maximize use of the computational resources within the virtual/physical data center and, by doing so, minimize operating costs. In addition, the organizations that lease computational resources provided by the 10 additional servers also achieve access to greater computational bandwidth for far less cost than would be incurred by purchasing and installing new physical servers. Considering the data centers participating in the market provided by the resource-exchange system as a large computing-facility aggregation, the aggregate computational efficiency is much higher, when leasing transactions are automatically facilitated by the resource-exchange system, than when no resource exchanges are possible. In the example discussed above with reference to FIGS. 2A-E, a larger fraction of the aggregate computational resources of the data centers are used because additional tasks are being executed by the 10 additional servers. Eventually, the 10 additional servers in data center 202 may be used for executing tasks on behalf of the organization that manages virtual/physical data center 202, once the leases have terminated. But, by initially purchasing the 10 additional servers at time point t₁, the organization managing data center 202 has taken advantage of a favorable purchase price for the 10 additional servers at time point t₁ without bearing the cost of the spare capacity represented by the 10 additional servers until internal tasks become available.

FIG. 3 illustrates another example of how the resource-exchange system can increase the computational efficiency of an aggregation of virtual/physical data centers. At the top of FIG. 3, two virtual/physical data centers 302 and 304 are shown as large rectangles. Indications 306 and 308 of the currently available computational resources within the virtual/physical data centers 302 and 304 are shown within the rectangles representing virtual/physical data centers 302 and 304. These resources include CPU bandwidth, available memory, and available mass-storage, in appropriate units. The first virtual/physical data center 302 is shown receiving a request 310 to execute an additional task, implemented as a virtual machine, that requires 10 units of CPU bandwidth, 4 units of memory, and 100 units of mass storage. The first virtual/physical data center declines 312 the request because the first virtual/physical data center has insufficient storage resources for executing the virtual machine. Similarly, the second virtual/physical data center 304 receives a request 314 to execute a new virtual machine but declines 316 the request because the second data lacks sufficient CPU bandwidth to execute the new virtual machine.

The same two virtual/physical data centers 302 and 304 and the same two virtual-machine-execution requests 310 and 314 are again shown in the lower portion of FIG. 3. However, in the example shown in the lower portion of FIG. 3, the two data centers have exchanged two already executing virtual machines 320 and 322 via the marketplace provided by the resource-exchange system. The virtual/physical first data center 302 has leased computational resources from the second virtual/physical data center 304 to execute a storage-intensive virtual machine 320. Because the second virtual/physical data center has an excess of mass-storage resources, the second virtual/physical data center can host virtual machine 320 less expensively than the virtual machine can be executed within the first virtual/physical data center 302. Similarly, the second data center has leased computational resources from the first virtual/physical data center to execute the CPU-bandwidth-intensive virtual machine 322. The result of exchanging virtual machines 320 and 322 is a decrease in the operational costs for both data centers and more balanced ratios of different types of available computational resources within each virtual/physical data center. As a result, the first virtual/physical data center 302 can now accept 324 the virtual-machine-execution request 310 and the second virtual/physical data center 304 can now except 326 the virtual-machine-execution request 314. Thus, due to ongoing computational-resource exchanges made possible by the resource-exchange system, the partial aggregation of the two data centers can run more tasks, with greater overall capacity usage, than in the case that resource exchanges are not possible. The partial aggregation of the two virtual/physical data centers is significantly more computationally efficient because of their use of the marketplace provided by the resource-exchange system.

Thus, although the resource-exchange system is discussed in terms of providing a computational-resource-leasing marketplace, the resource-exchange system is an effective tool for increasing the computational efficiency of a partial aggregation of multiple data centers or multiple clusters within a datacenter. The resource-exchange system functions to increase the fraction of resource-capacity usage in the partial aggregation of multiple data centers as well as to redistribute load in order to balance the ratios of different available computational resources used within each data center to facilitate execution of additional task load.

Overview of Computer Systems and Computer Architecture

FIG. 4 provides a general architectural diagram for various types of computers. The computer system contains one or multiple central processing units (“CPUs”) 402-405, one or more electronic memories 408 interconnected with the CPUs by a CPU/memory-subsystem bus 410 or multiple busses, a first bridge 412 that interconnects the CPU/memory-subsystem bus 410 with additional busses 414 and 416, or other types of high-speed interconnection media, including multiple, high-speed serial interconnects. These busses or serial interconnections, in turn, connect the CPUs and memory with specialized processors, such as a graphics processor 418, and with one or more additional bridges 420, which are interconnected with high-speed serial links or with multiple controllers 422-427, such as controller 427, that provide access to various different mass-storage devices 428, electronic displays, input devices, and other such components, subcomponents, and computational resources. It should be noted that computer-readable data-storage devices include optical and electromagnetic disks, electronic memories, and other physical data-storage devices. Those familiar with modern science and technology appreciate that electromagnetic radiation and propagating signals do not store data for subsequent retrieval and can transiently “store” only a byte or less of information per mile, far less information than needed to encode even the simplest of routines.

Of course, there are many different types of computer-system architectures that differ from one another in the number of different memories, including different types of hierarchical cache memories, the number of processors and the connectivity of the processors with other system components, the number of internal communications busses and serial links, and in many other ways. However, computer systems generally execute stored programs by fetching instructions from memory and executing the instructions in one or more processors. Computer systems include general-purpose computer systems, such as personal computers (“PCs”), various types of servers and workstations, and higher-end mainframe computers, but may also include a plethora of various types of special-purpose computing devices, including data-storage systems, communications routers, network nodes, tablet computers, and mobile telephones.

FIG. 5 illustrates an Internet-connected distributed computer system. As communications and networking technologies have evolved in capability and accessibility, and as the computational bandwidths, data-storage capacities, and other capabilities and capacities of various types of computer systems have steadily and rapidly increased, much of modern computing now generally involves large distributed systems and computers interconnected by local networks, wide-area networks, wireless communications, and the Internet. FIG. 5 shows a typical distributed system in which a large number of PCs 502-505, a high-end distributed mainframe system 510 with a large data-storage system 512, and a large computer center 514 with large numbers of rack-mounted servers or blade servers all interconnected through various communications and networking systems that together comprise the Internet 516. Such distributed computer systems provide diverse arrays of functionalities. For example, a PC user sitting in a home office may access hundreds of millions of different web sites provided by hundreds of thousands of different web servers throughout the world and may access high-computational-bandwidth computing services from remote computer facilities for running complex computational tasks.

Until recently, computational services were generally provided by computer systems and data centers purchased, configured, managed, and maintained by service-provider organizations. For example, an e-commerce retailer generally purchased, configured, managed, and maintained a data center including numerous web servers, back-end computer systems, and data-storage systems for serving web pages to remote customers, receiving orders through the web-page interface, processing the orders, tracking completed orders, and other myriad different tasks associated with an e-commerce enterprise.

FIG. 6 illustrates cloud computing. In the recently developed cloud-computing paradigm, computing cycles and data-storage facilities are provided to organizations and individuals by cloud-computing providers. In addition, larger organizations may elect to establish private cloud-computing facilities in addition to, or instead of, subscribing to computing services provided by public cloud-computing service providers. In FIG. 6, a system administrator for an organization, using a PC 602, accesses the organization's private cloud 604 through a local network 606 and private-cloud interface 608 and also accesses, through the Internet 610, a public cloud 612 through a public-cloud services interface 614. The administrator can, in either the case of the private cloud 604 or public cloud 612, configure virtual computer systems and even entire virtual data centers and launch execution of application programs on the virtual computer systems and virtual data centers in order to carry out any of many different types of computational tasks. As one example, a small organization may configure and run a virtual data center within a public cloud that executes web servers to provide an e-commerce interface through the public cloud to remote customers of the organization, such as a user viewing the organization's e-commerce web pages on a remote user system 616.

FIG. 7 illustrates generalized hardware and software components of a general-purpose computer system, such as a general-purpose computer system having an architecture similar to that shown in FIG. 4. The computer system 700 is often considered to include three fundamental layers: (1) a hardware layer or level 702; (2) an operating-system layer or level 704; and (3) an application-program layer or level 706. The hardware layer 702 includes one or more processors 708, system memory 710, various input-output (“110”) devices 710 and 712, and mass-storage devices 714. Of course, the hardware level also includes many other components, including power supplies, internal communications links and busses, specialized integrated circuits, many different types of processor-controlled or microprocessor-controlled peripheral devices and controllers, and many other components. The operating system 704 interfaces to the hardware level 702 through a low-level operating system and hardware interface 716 generally comprising a set of non-privileged computer instructions 718, a set of privileged computer instructions 720, a set of non-privileged registers and memory addresses 722, and a set of privileged registers and memory addresses 724. In general, the operating system exposes non-privileged instructions, non-privileged registers, and non-privileged memory addresses 726 and a system-call interface 728 as an operating-system interface 730 to application programs 732-736 that execute within an execution environment provided to the application programs by the operating system. The operating system, alone, accesses the privileged instructions, privileged registers, and privileged memory addresses. By reserving access to privileged instructions, privileged registers, and privileged memory addresses, the operating system can ensure that application programs and other higher-level computational entities cannot interfere with one another's execution and cannot change the overall state of the computer system in ways that could deleteriously impact system operation. The operating system includes many internal components and modules, including a scheduler 742, memory management 744, a file system 746, device drivers 748, and many other components and modules. To a certain degree, modern operating systems provide numerous levels of abstraction above the hardware level, including virtual memory, which provides to each application program and other computational entities a separate, large, linear memory-address space that is mapped by the operating system to various electronic memories and mass-storage devices. The scheduler orchestrates interleaved execution of various application programs and higher-level computational entities, providing to each application program a virtual, stand-alone system devoted entirely to the application program. From the application program's standpoint, the application program executes continuously without concern for the need to share processor resources and other system resources with other application programs and higher-level computational entities. The device drivers abstract details of hardware-component operation, allowing application programs to employ the system-call interface for transmitting and receiving data to and from communications networks, mass-storage devices, and other I/O devices and subsystems. The file system 746 facilitates abstraction of mass-storage-device and memory resources as a high-level, easy-to-access, file-system interface.

In many modern operating systems, the operating system provides an execution environment for concurrent execution of a large number of processes, each corresponding to an executing application program, on one or a relatively small number of hardware processors by temporal multiplexing of process execution. Thus, the development and evolution of the operating system has resulted in the generation of a type of multi-faceted virtual execution environment for application programs and other higher-level computational entities.

While the execution environments provided by operating systems have proved to be an enormously successful level of abstraction within computer systems, the operating-system-provided level of abstraction is nonetheless associated with difficulties and challenges for developers and users of application programs and other higher-level computational entities. One difficulty arises from the fact that there are many different operating systems that run within various different types of computer hardware. In many cases, popular application programs and computational systems are developed to run on only a subset of the available operating systems, and can therefore be executed within only a subset of the various different types of computer systems on which the operating systems are designed to run. Often, even when an application program or other computational system is ported to additional operating systems, the application program or other computational system can nonetheless run more efficiently on the operating systems for which the application program or other computational system was originally targeted. Another difficulty arises from the increasingly distributed nature of computer systems. Although distributed operating systems are the subject of considerable research and development efforts, many of the popular operating systems are designed primarily for execution on a single computer system. In many cases, it is difficult to move application programs, in real time, between the different computer systems of a distributed computer system for high-availability, fault-tolerance, and load-balancing purposes. The problems are even greater in heterogeneous distributed computer systems which include different types of hardware and devices running different types of operating systems. Operating systems continue to evolve, as a result of which certain older application programs and other computational entities may be incompatible with more recent versions of operating systems for which they are targeted, creating compatibility issues that are particularly difficult to manage in large distributed systems.

For these reasons, a higher level of abstraction, referred to as the “virtual machine,” has been developed and evolved to further abstract computer hardware in order to address many difficulties and challenges associated with traditional computing systems, including the compatibility issues discussed above. FIGS. 8A-B illustrate two types of virtual machine and virtual-machine execution environments. FIGS. 8A-B use the same illustration conventions as used in FIG. 7. FIG. 8A shows a first type of virtualization. The computer system 800 in FIG. 8A includes the same hardware layer 802 as the hardware layer 702 shown in FIG. 7. However, rather than providing an operating system layer directly above the hardware layer, as in FIG. 7, the virtualized computing environment illustrated in FIG. 8A features a virtualization layer 804 that interfaces through a virtualization-layer/hardware-layer interface 806, equivalent to interface 716 in FIG. 7, to the hardware. The virtualization layer provides a hardware-like interface 808 to a number of virtual machines, such as virtual machine 810, executing above the virtualization layer in a virtual-machine layer 812. Each virtual machine includes one or more application programs or other higher-level computational entities packaged together with an operating system, referred to as a “guest operating system,” such as application 814 and guest operating system 816 packaged together within virtual machine 810. Each virtual machine is thus equivalent to the operating-system layer 704 and application-program layer 706 in the general-purpose computer system shown in FIG. 7. Each guest operating system within a virtual machine interfaces to the virtualization-layer interface 808 rather than to the actual hardware interface 806. The virtualization layer partitions hardware resources into abstract virtual-hardware layers to which each guest operating system within a virtual machine interfaces. The guest operating systems within the virtual machines, in general, are unaware of the virtualization layer and operate as if they were directly accessing a true hardware interface. The virtualization layer ensures that each of the virtual machines currently executing within the virtual environment receive a fair allocation of underlying hardware resources and that all virtual machines receive sufficient resources to progress in execution. The virtualization-layer interface 808 may differ for different guest operating systems. For example, the virtualization layer is generally able to provide virtual hardware interfaces for a variety of different types of computer hardware. This allows, as one example, a virtual machine that includes a guest operating system designed for a particular computer architecture to run on hardware of a different architecture. The number of virtual machines need not be equal to the number of physical processors or even a multiple of the number of processors.

The virtualization layer includes a virtual-machine-monitor module 818 (“VMM”) that virtualizes physical processors in the hardware layer to create virtual processors on which each of the virtual machines executes. For execution efficiency, the virtualization layer attempts to allow virtual machines to directly execute non-privileged instructions and to directly access non-privileged registers and memory. However, when the guest operating system within a virtual machine accesses virtual privileged instructions, virtual privileged registers, and virtual privileged memory through the virtualization-layer interface 808, the accesses result in execution of virtualization-layer code to simulate or emulate the privileged resources. The virtualization layer additionally includes a kernel module 820 that manages memory, communications, and data-storage machine resources on behalf of executing virtual machines (“VM kernel”). The VM kernel, for example, maintains shadow page tables on each virtual machine so that hardware-level virtual-memory facilities can be used to process memory accesses. The VM kernel additionally includes routines that implement virtual communications and data-storage devices as well as device drivers that directly control the operation of underlying hardware communications and data-storage devices. Similarly, the VM kernel virtualizes various other types of I/O devices, including keyboards, optical-disk drives, and other such devices. The virtualization layer essentially schedules execution of virtual machines much like an operating system schedules execution of application programs, so that the virtual machines each execute within a complete and fully functional virtual hardware layer.

FIG. 8B illustrates a second type of virtualization. In FIG. 8B, the computer system 840 includes the same hardware layer 842 and software layer 844 as the hardware layer 702 shown in FIG. 7. Several application programs 846 and 848 are shown running in the execution environment provided by the operating system. In addition, a virtualization layer 850 is also provided, in computer 840, but, unlike the virtualization layer 804 discussed with reference to FIG. 8A, virtualization layer 850 is layered above the operating system 844, referred to as the “host OS,” and uses the operating system interface to access operating-system-provided functionality as well as the hardware. The virtualization layer 850 comprises primarily a VMM and a hardware-like interface 852, similar to hardware-like interface 808 in FIG. 8A. The virtualization-layer/hardware-layer interface 852, similar to interface 716 in FIG. 7, provides an execution environment for a number of virtual machines 856-858, each including one or more application programs or other higher-level computational entities packaged together with a guest operating system.

In FIGS. 8A-B, the layers are somewhat simplified for clarity of illustration. For example, portions of the virtualization layer 850 may reside within the host-operating-system kernel, such as a specialized driver incorporated into the host operating system to facilitate hardware access by the virtualization layer.

While the traditional virtual-machine-based virtualization layers, described with reference to FIGS. 8A-B, have enjoyed widespread adoption and use in a variety of different environments, from personal computers to enormous distributed computing systems, traditional virtualization technologies are associated with computational overheads. While these computational overheads have been steadily decreased, over the years, and often represent ten percent or less of the total computational bandwidth consumed by an application running in a virtualized environment, traditional virtualization technologies nonetheless involve computational costs in return for the power and flexibility that they provide. Another approach to virtualization is referred to as operating-system-level virtualization (“OSL virtualization”). FIG. 8C illustrates the OSL-virtualization approach. In FIG. 8C, as in previously discussed FIG. 7, an operating system 704 runs above the hardware 702 of a host computer. The operating system provides an interface for higher-level computational entities, the interface including a system-call interface 728 and exposure to the non-privileged instructions and memory addresses and registers 726 of the hardware layer 702. However, unlike in FIG. 8A, rather than applications running directly above the operating system, OSL virtualization involves an OS-level virtualization layer 860 that provides an operating-system interface 862-864 to each of one or more containers 866-868. The containers, in turn, provide an execution environment for one or more applications, such as application 870 running within the execution environment provided by container 866. The container can be thought of as a partition of the resources generally available to higher-level computational entities through the operating system interface 730. While a traditional virtualization layer can simulate the hardware interface expected by any of many different operating systems, OSL virtualization essentially provides a secure partition of the execution environment provided by a particular operating system. As one example, OSL virtualization provides a file system to each container, but the file system provided to the container is essentially a view of a partition of the general file system provided by the underlying operating system. In essence, OSL virtualization uses operating-system features, such as name space support, to isolate each container from the remaining containers so that the applications executing within the execution environment provided by a container are isolated from applications executing within the execution environments provided by all other containers. As a result, a container can be booted up much faster than a virtual machine, since the container uses operating-system-kernel features that are already available within the host computer. Furthermore, the containers share computational bandwidth, memory, network bandwidth, and other computational resources provided by the operating system, without resource overhead allocated to virtual machines and virtualization layers. Again, however, OSL virtualization does not provide many desirable features of traditional virtualization. As mentioned above, OSL virtualization does not provide a way to run different types of operating systems for different groups of containers within the same host system, nor does OSL-virtualization provide for live migration of containers between host computers, as does traditional virtualization technologies.

FIG. 8D illustrates an approach to combining the power and flexibility of traditional virtualization with the advantages of OSL virtualization. FIG. 8D shows a host computer similar to that shown in FIG. 8A, discussed above. The host computer includes a hardware layer 802 and a virtualization layer 804 that provides a simulated hardware interface 808 to an operating system 872. Unlike in FIG. 8A, the operating system interfaces to an OSL-virtualization layer 874 that provides container execution environments 876-878 to multiple application programs. Running containers above a guest operating system within a virtualized host computer provides many of the advantages of traditional virtualization and OSL virtualization. Containers can be quickly booted in order to provide additional execution environments and associated resources to new applications. The resources available to the guest operating system are efficiently partitioned among the containers provided by the OSL-virtualization layer 874. Many of the powerful and flexible features of the traditional virtualization technology can be applied to containers running above guest operating systems including live migration from one host computer to another, various types of high-availability and distributed resource sharing, and other such features. Containers provide share-based allocation of computational resources to groups of applications with guaranteed isolation of applications in one container from applications in the remaining containers executing above a guest operating system. Moreover, resource allocation can be modified at run time between containers. The traditional virtualization layer provides flexible and easy scaling and a simple approach to operating-system upgrades and patches. Thus, the use of OSL virtualization above traditional virtualization, as illustrated in FIG. 8D, provides much of the advantages of both a traditional virtualization layer and the advantages of OSL virtualization. Note that, although only a single guest operating system and OSL virtualization layer as shown in FIG. 8D, a single virtualized host system can run multiple different guest operating systems within multiple virtual machines, each of which supports one or more containers.

In FIGS. 8A-D, the layers are somewhat simplified for clarity of illustration. For example, portions of the virtualization layer 850 may reside within the host-operating-system kernel, such as a specialized driver incorporated into the host operating system to facilitate hardware access by the virtualization layer.

It should be noted that virtual hardware layers, virtualization layers, and guest operating systems are all physical entities that are implemented by computer instructions stored in physical data-storage devices, including electronic memories, mass-storage devices, optical disks, magnetic disks, and other such devices. The term “virtual” does not, in any way, imply that virtual hardware layers, virtualization layers, and guest operating systems are abstract or intangible. Virtual hardware layers, virtualization layers, and guest operating systems execute on physical processors of physical computer systems and control operation of the physical computer systems, including operations that alter the physical states of physical devices, including electronic memories and mass-storage devices. They are as physical and tangible as any other component of a computer since, such as power supplies, controllers, processors, busses, and data-storage devices.

A virtual machine or virtual application, described below, is encapsulated within a data package for transmission, distribution, and loading into a virtual-execution environment. One public standard for virtual-machine encapsulation is referred to as the “open virtualization format” (“OVF”). The OVF standard specifies a format for digitally encoding a virtual machine within one or more data files. FIG. 9 illustrates an OVF package. An OVF package 902 includes an OVF descriptor 904, an OVF manifest 906, an OVF certificate 908, one or more disk-image files 910-911, and one or more resource files 912-914. The OVF package can be encoded and stored as a single file or as a set of files. The OVF descriptor 904 is an XML document 920 that includes a hierarchical set of elements, each demarcated by a beginning tag and an ending tag. The outermost, or highest-level, element is the envelope element, demarcated by tags 922 and 923. The next-level element includes a reference element 926 that includes references to all files that are part of the OVF package, a disk section 928 that contains meta information about the virtual disks included in the OVF package, a networks section 930 that includes meta information about the logical networks included in the OVF package, and a collection of virtual-machine configurations 932 which further includes hardware descriptions of each virtual machine 934. There are many additional hierarchical levels and elements within a typical OVF descriptor. The OVF descriptor is thus a self-describing XML file that describes the contents of an OVF package. The OVF manifest 906 is a list of cryptographic-hash-function-generated digests 936 of the entire OVF package and of the various components of the OVF package. The OVF certificate 908 is an authentication certificate 940 that includes a digest of the manifest and that is cryptographically signed. Disk image files, such as disk image file 910, are digital encodings of the contents of virtual disks and resource files 912 are digitally encoded content, such as operating-system images. A virtual machine or a collection of virtual machines encapsulated together within a virtual application can thus be digitally encoded as one or more files within an OVF package that can be transmitted, distributed, and loaded using well-known tools for transmitting, distributing, and loading files. A virtual appliance is a software service that is delivered as a complete software stack installed within one or more virtual machines that is encoded within an OVF package.

FIG. 10 illustrates virtual data centers provided as an abstraction of underlying physical-data-center hardware components. In FIG. 10, a physical data center 1002 is shown below a virtual-interface plane 1004. The physical data center consists of a virtual-infrastructure management server (“VI-management-server”) 1006 and any of various different computers, such as PCs 1008, on which a virtual-data-center management interface may be displayed to system administrators and other users. The physical data center additionally includes generally large numbers of server computers, such as server computer 1010, that are coupled together by local area networks, such as local area network 1012 that directly interconnects server computer 1010 and 1014-1020 and a mass-storage array 1022. The physical data center shown in FIG. 10 includes three local area networks 1012, 1024, and 1026 that each directly interconnects a bank of eight servers and a mass-storage array. The individual server computers, such as server computer 1010, each includes a virtualization layer and runs multiple virtual machines. Different physical data centers may include many different types of computers, networks, data-storage systems and devices connected according to many different types of connection topologies. The virtual-data-center abstraction layer 1004, a logical abstraction layer shown by a plane in FIG. 10, abstracts the physical data center to a virtual data center comprising one or more resource pools, such as resource pools 1030-1032, one or more virtual data stores, such as virtual data stores 1034-1036, and one or more virtual networks. In certain implementations, the resource pools abstract banks of physical servers directly interconnected by a local area network.

The virtual-data-center management interface allows provisioning and launching of virtual machines with respect to resource pools, virtual data stores, and virtual networks, so that virtual-data-center administrators need not be concerned with the identities of physical-data-center components used to execute particular virtual machines. Furthermore, the VI-management-server includes functionality to migrate running virtual machines from one physical server to another in order to optimally or near optimally manage resource allocation, provide fault tolerance, and high availability by migrating virtual machines to most effectively utilize underlying physical hardware resources, to replace virtual machines disabled by physical hardware problems and failures, and to ensure that multiple virtual machines supporting a high-availability virtual appliance are executing on multiple physical computer systems so that the services provided by the virtual appliance are continuously accessible, even when one of the multiple virtual appliances becomes compute bound, data-access bound, suspends execution, or fails. Thus, the virtual data center layer of abstraction provides a virtual-data-center abstraction of physical data centers to simplify provisioning, launching, and maintenance of virtual machines and virtual appliances as well as to provide high-level, distributed functionalities that involve pooling the resources of individual physical servers and migrating virtual machines among physical servers to achieve load balancing, fault tolerance, and high availability.

FIG. 11 illustrates virtual-machine components of a VI-management-server and physical servers of a physical data center above which a virtual-data-center interface is provided by the VI-management-server. The VI-management-server 1102 and a virtual-data-center database 1104 comprise the physical components of the management component of the virtual data center. The VI-management-server 1102 includes a hardware layer 1106 and virtualization layer 1108 and runs a virtual-data-center management-server virtual machine 1110 above the virtualization layer. Although shown as a single server in FIG. 11, the VI-management-server (“VI management server”) may include two or more physical server computers that support multiple VI-management-server virtual appliances. The virtual machine 1110 includes a management-interface component 1112, distributed services 1114, core services 1116, and a host-management interface 1118. The management interface is accessed from any of various computers, such as the PC 1008 shown in FIG. 10. The management interface allows the virtual-data-center administrator to configure a virtual data center, provision virtual machines, collect statistics and view log files for the virtual data center, and to carry out other, similar management tasks. The host-management interface 1118 interfaces to virtual-data-center agents 1124, 1125, and 1126 that execute as virtual machines within each of the physical servers of the physical data center that is abstracted to a virtual data center by the VI management server.

The distributed services 1114 include a distributed-resource scheduler that assigns virtual machines to execute within particular physical servers and that migrates virtual machines in order to most effectively make use of computational bandwidths, data-storage capacities, and network capacities of the physical data center. The distributed services further include a high-availability service that replicates and migrates virtual machines in order to ensure that virtual machines continue to execute despite problems and failures experienced by physical hardware components. The distributed services also include a live-virtual-machine migration service that temporarily halts execution of a virtual machine, encapsulates the virtual machine in an OVF package, transmits the OVF package to a different physical server, and restarts the virtual machine on the different physical server from a virtual-machine state recorded when execution of the virtual machine was halted. The distributed services also include a distributed backup service that provides centralized virtual-machine backup and restore.

The core services provided by the VI management server include host configuration, virtual-machine configuration, virtual-machine provisioning, generation of virtual-data-center alarms and events, ongoing event logging and statistics collection, a task scheduler, and a resource-management module. Each physical server 1120-1122 also includes a host-agent virtual machine 1128-1130 through which the virtualization layer can be accessed via a virtual-infrastructure application programming interface (“API”). This interface allows a remote administrator or user to manage an individual server through the infrastructure API. The virtual-data-center agents 1124-1126 access virtualization-layer server information through the host agents. The virtual-data-center agents are primarily responsible for offloading certain of the virtual-data-center management-server functions specific to a particular physical server to that physical server. The virtual-data-center agents relay and enforce resource allocations made by the VI management server, relay virtual-machine provisioning and configuration-change commands to host agents, monitor and collect performance statistics, alarms, and events communicated to the virtual-data-center agents by the local host agents through the interface API, and to carry out other, similar virtual-data-management tasks.

The virtual-data-center abstraction provides a convenient and efficient level of abstraction for exposing the computational resources of a cloud-computing facility to cloud-computing-infrastructure users. A cloud-director management server exposes virtual resources of a cloud-computing facility to cloud-computing-infrastructure users. In addition, the cloud director introduces a multi-tenancy layer of abstraction, which partitions virtual data centers (“VDCs”) into tenant-associated VDCs that can each be allocated to a particular individual tenant or tenant organization, both referred to as a “tenant.” A given tenant can be provided one or more tenant-associated VDCs by a cloud director managing the multi-tenancy layer of abstraction within a cloud-computing facility. The cloud services interface (308 in FIG. 3) exposes a virtual-data-center management interface that abstracts the physical data center.

FIG. 12 illustrates a cloud-director level of abstraction. In FIG. 12, three different physical data centers 1202-1204 are shown below planes representing the cloud-director layer of abstraction 1206-1208. Above the planes representing the cloud-director level of abstraction, multi-tenant virtual data centers 1210-1212 are shown. The resources of these multi-tenant virtual data centers are securely partitioned in order to provide secure virtual data centers to multiple tenants, or cloud-services-accessing organizations. For example, a cloud-services-provider virtual data center 1210 is partitioned into four different tenant-associated virtual-data centers within a multi-tenant virtual data center for four different tenants 1216-1219. Each multi-tenant virtual data center is managed by a cloud director comprising one or more cloud-director servers 1220-1222 and associated cloud-director databases 1224-1226. Each cloud-director server or servers runs a cloud-director virtual appliance 1230 that includes a cloud-director management interface 1232, a set of cloud-director services 1234, and a virtual-data-center management-server interface 1236. The cloud-director services include an interface and tools for provisioning multi-tenant virtual data center virtual data centers on behalf of tenants, tools and interfaces for configuring and managing tenant organizations, tools and services for organization of virtual data centers and tenant-associated virtual data centers within the multi-tenant virtual data center, services associated with template and media catalogs, and provisioning of virtualization networks from a network pool. Templates are virtual machines that each contains an OS and/or one or more virtual machines containing applications. A template may include much of the detailed contents of virtual machines and virtual appliances that are encoded within OVF packages, so that the task of configuring a virtual machine or virtual appliance is significantly simplified, requiring only deployment of one OVF package. These templates are stored in catalogs within a tenant's virtual-data center. These catalogs are used for developing and staging new virtual appliances and published catalogs are used for sharing templates in virtual appliances across organizations. Catalogs may include OS images and other information relevant to construction, distribution, and provisioning of virtual appliances.

Considering FIGS. 10 and 12, the VI management server and cloud-director layers of abstraction can be seen, as discussed above, to facilitate employment of the virtual-data-center concept within private and public clouds. However, this level of abstraction does not fully facilitate aggregation of single-tenant and multi-tenant virtual data centers into heterogeneous or homogeneous aggregations of cloud-computing facilities.

FIG. 13 illustrates virtual-cloud-connector nodes (“VCC nodes”) and a VCC server, components of a distributed system that provides multi-cloud aggregation and that includes a cloud-connector server and cloud-connector nodes that cooperate to provide services that are distributed across multiple clouds. VMware vCloud™ VCC servers and nodes are one example of VCC server and nodes. In FIG. 13, seven different cloud-computing facilities are illustrated 1302-1308. Cloud-computing facility 1302 is a private multi-tenant cloud with a cloud director 1310 that interfaces to a VI management server 1312 to provide a multi-tenant private cloud comprising multiple tenant-associated virtual data centers. The remaining cloud-computing facilities 1303-1308 may be either public or private cloud-computing facilities and may be single-tenant virtual data centers, such as virtual data centers 1303 and 1306, multi-tenant virtual data centers, such as multi-tenant virtual data centers 1304 and 1307-1308, or any of various different kinds of third-party cloud-services facilities, such as third-party cloud-services facility 1305. An additional component, the VCC server 1314, acting as a controller is included in the private cloud-computing facility 1302 and interfaces to a VCC node 1316 that runs as a virtual appliance within the cloud director 1310. A VCC server may also run as a virtual appliance within a VI management server that manages a single-tenant private cloud. The VCC server 1314 additionally interfaces, through the Internet, to VCC node virtual appliances executing within remote VI management servers, remote cloud directors, or within the third-party cloud services 1318-1323. The VCC server provides a VCC server interface that can be displayed on a local or remote terminal, PC, or other computer system 1326 to allow a cloud-aggregation administrator or other user to access VCC-server-provided aggregate-cloud distributed services. In general, the cloud-computing facilities that together form a multiple-cloud-computing aggregation through distributed services provided by the VCC server and VCC nodes are geographically and operationally distinct.

Distributed-Search Engine

The current document is directed to a distributed resource-exchange system that employs a distributed-search subsystem to identify potential resource exchanges and select, from the identified potential resource exchanges, resource exchanges that best meet specified requirements and constraints. The distributed-search subsystem provides an auction-based method for matching of resource providers to resource users within a very large, distributed aggregation of virtual and physical data centers owned and managed by a large number of different organization. The distributed-search subsystem, however, is a general searching subsystem that can be used for many additional distributed-search operations.

Distributed searches are initiated by distributed-search participants, which may be any type of processor-controlled device that supports access to a distributed-search application programming interface (“API”) or graphical user interface (“UI”). In a described implementation, the distributed-search subsystem comprises one or more local instances and one or more distributed-search engines. In the described implementation, local instances execute as web-application plug-ins within one or more virtual machines of a management subsystem. However, many alternative implementations are possible, including standalone applications and even hardware appliances. The local instances support the distributed-search API and/or UI, store local-instance data to support the distributed-search API and/or UI, and exchange request messages and response messages with the one or more distributed-search engines to initiate distributed searches, add attributes to a set of centrally stored attributes, and manage operation of the distributed-search subsystem. The one or more distributed-search engines communicate with local instances, centrally store various types of distributed-search-subsystem data, and carry out distributed searches on behalf of requesting local instances, maintaining an active search context for each search.

Entities for which searches are carried out can be of many different types, from information and data to hardware components and subsystems, automated services, products, remote computer systems connected to the distributed computer system, human users of those systems, and various types of computers, information, devices, and information accessible to the remote computer systems. The entities are characterized by attribute/value pairs. For example, a computational resource might be characterized by the attribute/value pairs: memory/2 GB; processor_bandwidth/1.2 GHz; networkbandwidth/100 MB\see. Search results may include the values for one or more attributes as well as identifying information for providers, network addresses, and additional information.

Searches are parameterized by attribute/value pairs. These parameters may specify a scope for the search, minimum requirements for successful responses, search termination conditions, and many other operational parameters that allow searches to accurately tailored to user and participant needs. Participants may also be characterized by attribute/value pairs. For example, participants may be characterized by ratings that reflect past performance in supplying requested products and services.

FIGS. 14A-C illustrate components and general operation of the distributed-search methods and subsystems. FIG. 14A uses illustration conventions, which are next described, that are subsequently used in FIG. 14C. A large distributed computer system is represented, in FIGS. 14A and 14C, by four sets 1402-1405 of computers, each set representing a virtualized-server cluster, virtual data center, or group of virtual data centers. In large distributed computer systems, there may be tens, hundreds, or more server clusters and virtual data centers linked together by many layers of internal and external communications systems. In FIGS. 14A and 11C, local internal communications are represented by interconnecting lines or channels, such as local network 1406 within server cluster or virtual data center 1403, and one or more wide-area networks or other external communications systems are represented by cloud 1407. The distributed-computer-system representation used in FIGS. 14A-C is abstracted to provide for concise and simple illustration of the currently disclosed distributed-search methods and subsystems.

In the example distributed computer system shown in FIGS. 14A and 14C, a management subsystem is implemented as a multi-tiered application 1408 including two or more virtual machines 1409-1410 within a management server 1412 of a server cluster or virtual data center 1405. The management subsystem displays a management user interface 1414 on one or more management consoles 1416 used by system managers or administrators to manage operation of a server cluster or virtual data center. Each server cluster or virtual data center, such as server clusters or virtual data centers 1402-1404, may also include a management subsystem, such as the management subsystem 1408-1410 within server cluster or virtual data center 1405. In certain implementations, a management subsystem may span two or more server clusters or virtual data centers.

The management subsystem provides a comprehensive server cluster or virtual data center management interface to system administrators. Through the management user interface, system administrators specify operational parameters that control facilities that store, manage, and deploy multi-tiered application and VM templates, facilities that provide for high-availability virtual-machine execution, tools for migrating executing VMs among servers and execution environments, VM replication, and data backup and recovery services.

FIG. 14B illustrates one implementation of a high-level architecture of the management subsystem 1408-1410 discussed above with reference to FIG. 14A. In the management subsystem, a first virtual machine 1418 is responsible for providing the management user interface via an administrator web application 1420, as well as compiling and processing certain types of analytical data 1422 that are stored in a local database 1424. In addition, the first virtual machine runs numerous custom web applications 1426-1427 that provide additional functionalities accessible through the management user interface. The first virtual machine also provides an execution environment for a distributed-search web application 1428 that represents a local instance of the distributed-search subsystem within a server cluster, virtual data center, or some other set of computational resources within the distributed computer system. A second virtual machine 1430 is primarily concerned with collecting metrics 1432 from various types of components, subcomponents, servers, network-storage appliances, and other components of the distributed computing system via analytics messaging 1434 and then analyzing the collected metrics 1436 to provide continuous representations of the status and state of the distributed computer system, to automatically identify various types of events and problems that are addressed automatically, semi-automatically, or manually by system administrators, and to provide additional types of monitoring and analysis, the results of which are stored in several local databases 1438-1439.

As shown in FIG. 14C, the local instance of the distributed-search subsystem (1428 in FIG. 14B) is invoked, in one implementation, through the management user interface to provide a distributed-search user interface 1440 to a system administrator or, in other cases, to provide a distributed-search application programming interface (“API”) to various automated management and computational-resource-distribution subsystems within the distributed computer system. Communication between the management subsystem 1408 and the system console 1416 is provided, in one implementation, over a secure virtual management network within the distributed computer system, represented in FIGS. 14A and 14C by dashed lines, such as dashed line 1442. The distributed-search user interface 1440 provides facilities for the creation and storage of search policies, filters, and search queries, further discussed below. The distributed-search user interface also provides various types of administration operations and functionalities. A user launches searches through the distributed-search user interface and automated subsystems launches searches through a distributed-search API, both provided by a local instance of the distributed-search subsystem. A search initiated by specifying filters, policies, and search-result evaluation criteria previously created and stored through the distributed-search user interface or distributed-search API.

A search is initiated by the transmission of a search-initiation request, from the distributed-search user interface or through a remote call to the distributed-search API 1444, to a local instance of the distributed-search subsystem within the management subsystem 1408. The local instance of the distributed-search subsystem then prepares a search-request message that is transmitted 1446 to a distributed-search engine 1448, in one implementation implemented as a multi-tiered application containing one or more distributed-search-engine virtual machines that runs within a server or other computer system within the distributed computer system. The distributed-search engine transmits dynamic-attribute-value requests to each of a set of target participants within the distributed computing system, as represented by arrows emanating from the distributed-search engine 1448 and directed to each of a particular component or layer within the computer systems of the distributed computer system. The transmission may occur over a period of time in which batches of dynamic-attribute-value requests are transmitted at intervals, to avoid overloading communications subsystems. The set of target participants is obtained by using filters included within the search request to evaluate centrally stored static attribute values for entities within the distributed computer system, as discussed, in detail, below. Initial filtering avoids transmission of messages to entities incapable of satisfying search-request criteria. Note that the target participants may be any type or class of distributed-computing-system component or subsystem that can support execution of functionality that receives dynamic-attribute-value-request messages from a distributed-search engine. In certain cases, the target participants are components of management subsystems, such as local instances of the distributed-search subsystem (1428 in FIG. 14B). However, target participants may also be virtualization layers, operating systems, virtual machines, applications, or even various types of hardware components that are implemented to include an ability to receive attribute-value-request messages and respond to the received messages. Finally, the distributed-search engine 1448 receives responses from the target participants within the distributed computer system and continuously evaluates the responses to maintain a small set of best responses. In many cases, there may be significant periods of time between reception of a dynamic-attribute-value request by a target participant and sending of a response by the target participant. When termination criteria for the search are satisfied, and the search is therefore terminated, the set of best responses to the transmitted dynamic-attribute-value-request messages are first verified, by a message exchange with each target participant that furnished the response message, and are then transmitted 1452 from the distributed-search engine to one or more search-result recipients 1454 specified in the initial search request. A search-result recipient may be the local instance of the distributed-search subsystem that initiated the distributed search, but may alternatively be any other component or entity or set of components or entities of the distributed computer system that supports reception of a distributed search-results message.

FIGS. 15A-C illustrate certain of the information and data entities used within the distributed-search methods and subsystems. The distributed search is used to identify entities managed by, contained within, or accessible to distributed-search participants. These entities are characterized by attribute/value pairs. An entity may be a participant, a service, information, distributed-computer-system components, remote computers connected through communications media with the distributed computer system, remote-computer users, or any of many other types of entities that can be characterized by attribute values and that are desired to be identified through distributed searches.

FIG. 15A illustrates an attribute/value pair. The attribute 1502 is an alphanumeric string that identifies a particular attribute within a universal set of attributes used by the distributed-search methods and subsystems. Attributes are, in many implementations, centrally stored and managed by one or more distributed-search engines. An attribute is instantiated by being associated with one or more any of the above-mentioned types of entities. Instantiated attributes are associated with values. In this respect, an attribute is similar to a variable used in programming-language statements. The variable has a name, is instantiated within a particular scope comprising the routines from which it is visible, and an instantiated variable can store any of various different values within the value domain of the variable.

In the currently disclosed distributed-search methods and subsystems, three types of attributes are generally encountered: (1) entity attributes 1506, which are associated with entities that are identified by searches; (2) search attributes 1507, which identify particular parameters for a given distributed search; and (3) search-participant attributes 1508, which characterize a participant, generally a participant initiating a distributed search. Entity attributes 1506 fall into two classes: (1) static entity attributes 1509, which are entity attributes that, when instantiated, have either constant values or have values that are only infrequently changed and can therefore be pre-fetched and stored by the distributed-search engine in advance of being used during the initiation of distributed searches; and (2) dynamic entity attributes 1510, which are frequently modified and are therefore retrieved, at search time, by transmitting dynamic-attribute-value-request messages to target participants. The value 1504 currently associated with an instantiated attribute 1502 in an attribute/value pair is generally represented by an alphanumeric string. Attribute values can be numeric 1512, elements of a set 1513, elements of an ordered set 1514, Boolean values 1515, or generalized calls to functions or procedures that return numeric, set, ordered-set, or Boolean values 1526. A value may be one of a single element of a set, a subset of a set, single numeric values, or numeric-value ranges. In FIG. 15A, examples of the various different types of values are given in parentheses, such as the example range “[3-7.36]” 1517 provided for the mixed-range subtype 1518 of the numeric 1512 value type.

FIG. 15B shows certain derived types of information and data used by the distributed-search methods and subsystems to which the current application is directed. Values may be combined in value expressions 1520. These are familiar arithmetic and set expressions that include binary arithmetic operators 1522 and binary set operators 1523 as well as various types of arithmetic and set unary operators 1524. Value expressions can be considered to be expressions equivalent to constant values. Similarly, attributes may be combined in attribute expressions 1526 which are equivalent to expressions in programming languages that include variables. When the attributes in an attribute expression are replaced by specific values with which they are associated, the attribute expression is equivalent to a constant value. A derived attribute 1528 is an attribute defined in terms of other attributes. Value expressions can be combined by common relational operators to produce relational value expressions 1530 using relational binary operators 1532, relational unary operators 1534, and logical operators 1536.

FIG. 15C illustrates additional data and information types used in the distributed-search methods and subsystems to which the current application is directed. A filter 1540 is a relational expression that specifies a value or range of values for an attribute. A policy 1542 comprises one or more filters. A search-evaluation expression 1544 is used to evaluate returned dynamic-attribute values from participant search-request responders in order to compute a score for a response, as discussed, in detail, below. A search-evaluation expression comprises one or more evaluators. An evaluator 1546 is either a simple evaluator or a weight/simple-evaluator pair. A simple evaluator 1548 is a minimum-positive attribute or a floor/minimum-positive-attribute pair. A minimum-positive attribute is an attribute having values selected from a numeric or ordered-set value domain that map to a set of numerically increasing values, generally beginning with the value “0.” As the value increases, the desirability or fitness of the attribute and its associated value decreases. For example, an attribute “price” may have values in the range [0, maximum_price], with lower prices more desirable than higher prices and the price value 0, otherwise referred to as “free,” being most desirable. In general, an attribute that is not a minimally positive can be easily transformed into a derived, minimum-positive-attribute. For example, the attribute “expected lifetime” can be transformed into the derived attribute “early expiration” by: early_expiration:MAXIMUM_LIFETIME−expected_lifetime. A weight is a numeric multiplier and a floor is a numeric or ordered-set value. Weights are used to adjust the relative importance of attributes in search-evaluation expression and a floor is used to set a lowest-meaningful value of an attribute to a value greater than 0, for numeric attributes, or to an ordered-set value greater than the minimum value in the ordered set. A search 1552 is either a search-evaluation expression or a search-evaluation expression and one or more policies.

FIGS. 16A-B illustrate certain types of data maintained and used within local instances of the distributed-search subsystem and within a distributed-search engine. As shown in FIG. 16A, a local instance of the distributed-search subsystem stores one or more filters 1602, one or more policies 1604, each policy comprising one or more filters, one or more evaluators 1606, one or more search-evaluation expressions 1608, each search-evaluation expression comprising one or more evaluators, and one or more searches 1610, each search comprising a search-evaluation expression and zero, one, or more policies. In FIG. 16A, each row, such as row 1612, within a set of information entities, such as the set of filters 1602, represents a single information entity of the type of the entity set. The various types of information entities may be stored in relational database tables, including singly or multiply indexed relational database tables, or in any of many other different types of data-storage objects and systems.

Using similar illustration conventions as used in FIG. 16A, FIG. 16B shows the types of information entities stored within the distributed-search engine. The information-entity sets include a set of participants 1620, a set of continuously collected static-attribute/value pairs associated with participants 1622, a set of attributes 1624 and a set of attribute types 1626 which define the attributes that can be used in filters and profiles, a set of sets 1628 from which set values and subsets are selected for set-valued attributes, and a set of active search contexts 1630, each active search context representing a distributed search currently being executed by the distributed-search subsystem.

FIG. 17 is a high-level diagram of the distributed-search engine. The distributed-search engine receives incoming messages from one or more communications subsystems in an input queue 1702 and outputs messages to an output queue 1704 from which they are extracted and transmitted by the one or more communications subsystems. There are many different types of messages received and transmitted by the distributed-search engine. Different types of messages can be thought of as being distributed from the input queue 1702 to input queues for specific message types, such as input queue 1706 for search requests. Similarly, specific types of output messages are output to specific output queues, such as output queue 1708, from which they are input to the general output queue 1704 for transmission. Various different types of controllers or logic modules 1710-1714 process particular types of input messages and generate particular types of output messages. For example, controller 1710 receives search requests from distributed-search participants and outputs results corresponding to the search requests. Controller 1711 outputs information requests, such as dynamic attribute-value requests, and receives responses to those information requests. Controller 1712 receives UI information requests from local instances of the distributed-search subsystem and outputs responses to those requests. For example, a local instance of the distributed-search subsystem may request a current list of the different types of attributes that can be used to construct filters, policies, and search-evaluation expressions. Controller 1713 outputs static-attribute requests to distributed-search participants and receives response to those requests. Controller 1714 receives management commands and requests from local instances of the distributed-search subsystem and outputs responses to the received commands and requests. Ellipses 1716 indicate that a distributed-search engine may include additional types of controllers that receive and output additional specific types of messages.

FIG. 18 illustrates various messages and data structures used during execution of a distributed search by the distributed-search subsystem, including an active search context, a search request, a search-request response, and information requests and responses. A search-initiation-request message 1802 includes header information 1804 as well as a search-initiation request 1806 that includes a search-evaluation expression and zero, one, or more policies. A search-result message 1810 also includes a header 1812 and one or more search results 1814. Search results identify entities and include attribute/value pairs that characterize the entities. An information request 1820 is sent by the distributed-search engine to target participants requesting current values for a set of dynamic attributes 1822 specified in the information-request message. A response to the information-request message 1824 includes the requested dynamic-attribute values 1826.

An active search context 1830 is a complex data structure maintained by the distributed-search engine for each distributed search currently being executed by the distributed-search engine. In one implementation, an active search context includes an indication of the type of search 1832, a start time for the search 1834, an end time for the search 1836, and a number of additional, search parameters 1838. The active search context may store the search-initiation-request message 1840 that initiated the search. The active search context may additionally include a batch size 1842, indicating the number of information requests to be sent in each batch of transmitted information requests and an indication of the time at which the last batch of information-request messages was sent 1844. Ellipses 1846 indicate that many additional parameters and information entities may be stored within an active search context. The active search context may also include a list of target participants 1850 to which information requests need to be directed. These may be participant addresses, expressions from which sets of participant addresses may be computed, or other types of information that can be used to generate addresses for target participants during execution of a distributed search. In addition, the active search context includes an indication of the number of evaluators in the search-evaluation expression 1856, a set of evaluator queues 1858, and a master queue 1860. The evaluator queues maintain an ordered set of returned dynamic-attribute values corresponding to the dynamic attribute associated each evaluator in the search-evaluation expression. The master queue 1860 maintains dynamic-attribute values, scores, and other information for the participants with the best-evaluated responses so far received. Operation of the evaluator queues and master queue is discussed, in great detail, below.

FIGS. 19A-B illustrate operation of the evaluator queues and master queue within an active search context. In this example, a dynamic-attribute-value-request message, a type of information-request message, is transmitted to target participants to obtain current values for each of 3 attributes a, b, and c. The search-evaluation expression 1902 associated with the distributed search is: 3(10,a)+5b+c. The “+” operators indicate that a score is computed by adding values computed for each evaluator. The first evaluator, 3(10,a), has a weight equal to 3, a floor equal to 10, and is computed from the current value of attribute a. The second evaluator 5b has a weight of 5 and is computed from the current value of attribute b. The third evaluator is simply the value of attribute c. The search-evaluation expression is used to compute scores for each received response message, with lower scores more favorable than higher scores. Three evaluator queues 1904-1906 store, in sorted order, the values for attributes a, b, and c for the participant responses stored in the master queue MQ 1908. The number of stored responses is indicated in the variable num 1909. In FIGS. 19A-B, the state of the evaluator queues and the master queue are indicated before and after reception of each of a series of responses to dynamic-attribute-value-request messages. Initially, the queues are empty 1910. After a first response 1912 is received, an entry is placed in each queue, resulting in the queue state 1914. The first response message 1912 includes numeric values for the three attributes a, b, and c 1915, 1916, and 1917. It is also associated with an identifier, or ID 1918. In this example, the IDs are simple monotonically increasing integers starting with “1.”

Next, processing of the first response message 1912 is described. The three attribute values 1915-1917 are entered into their respective queues 1920-1922. Because the queues are initially empty, they become the first entries in the queues and are therefore in sorted order. Then, a score is computed using the search-evaluation expression 1902. First, if a returned value is less than the floor in the evaluator associated with the attribute value, an initial evaluator score is set to the floor value. Otherwise, the initial evaluator score is set to the value returned in the response message. Then, a percentage or ratio is computed for each initial evaluator score and the maximum value in the queue in which the associated attribute value was inserted. The ratio is multiplied by 100 to generate an intermediate evaluator score in the range [0, 100]. Then, the intermediate evaluator score is multiplied by the weight to produce a final evaluator score. The three evaluator scores are then added to produce the final score for the response message. In the case of the first response message 1912, all of the returned attribute values are the maximum values in the queues. Therefore, the score is computed as:

(3×((30÷30)×100))+(5×((25÷25)×100))+((75÷75)×100)=900

This score is entered, in association with the identifier for the response message “1,” into the master queue as the first entry 1924. There is now one entry in the master queue and each evaluator queue, so the variable num now has the value “1” 1925. Of course, this is merely one way to compute a score from the search-evaluation expression and returned attribute values. Many other types of score computations can be used. For example, the rank of an attribute value in an evaluator queue can be used in addition to, or in place of, the percentage of the maximum value in the queue to compute the intermediate evaluator score. The raw computed ratios of values to max values in queues can be used, rather than percentages. Exponentials and logarithms can be employed to generate non-linear scoring methods. Evaluator scores may be combined by operations other than addition. However, the currently described method has proven to provide good results for certain multi-attribute search results.

A second response message 1926 is then received, and the same operations are performed. Because the values in the evaluator queues are sorted in ascending order, and because the value “100” for attribute c in the second response message 1927 is greater than the value “75” for attribute c in the first response message 1917, the value “100” is now at the end of the evaluator queue 1928 for attribute c. The scores for the first and second messages are now recomputed as:

(3×((30÷30)×100))+(5×((25÷25)×100))+((75÷100)×100)=875

(3×((22÷30)×100))+(5×((20÷25)×100))+((100÷100)×100)=720

In the illustrated queue states, the master queue is kept sorted, in ascending order, so the score and identifier for the second response message occupies the first position 1929 in the master queue and the identifier and score for the second response message now occupies the second position 1930 in the master queue. Again, the lower the score, the more desirable the response. As will be seen, below, the active search context is designed to retain a set of the lowest-scored response messages, alternatively referred to as “most favorably scored response messages,” received during the course of the distributed search.

A third response message 1932 is then received, and the same operations are performed. In this case, the value for attribute a, “7,” 1934 is lower than the floor “10” for the first evaluator, so the value “10” is used instead of the value “7” in computing the evaluator score associated, with attribute a. The scores for all three messages are recomputed as:

(3×((30÷30)×100))+(5×((25÷27)×100))+((75÷100)×100)=837

(3×((22÷30)×100))+(5×((20÷27)×100))+((100÷100)×100)=690

(3×((10÷30)×100))+(5×((27=27)×100))+((54÷100)×100)=654

In this example, the master queue is kept sorted, in ascending order, so the score and identifier for the second response message occupies the first position 1929 in the master queue and the identifier and score for the second response message now occupies the second position 1930 in the master queue.

Four more response messages 1936-1939 are received, resulting in the queue state 1940 shown in FIG. 19B. At this point, the evaluator queues and the master queue are full. From now on, any newly received response message added to the master queue along with individual attribute values added to the evaluator queues, will involve discarding an entry from each queue. This only occurs when the score computed for the newly received response message is lower than one of the scores in the master queue. As more and more responses are received, the likelihood that any next received response will be entered into the evaluator and master queues quickly decreases to a relatively low value for most types of distributed searches. The operations now become slightly more complex. First, as shown in a scratch-pad representation 1942 of the evaluator and master queues, there is an additional entry in each queue that can temporarily accommodate the attribute values and score for a newly received message. The scores are computed based on all of the entries, including those for the newly arrived response, and then the entries for the response with the highest score are deleted. Newly arrived response 1944 with ID equal to “8” ends up with a score “658,” placing it towards the middle 1946 of the scratch-pad master queue. The score for response message “7” 1948 is now highest, and therefore the entries for that response message are deleted from the queues to produce queue state 1950.

The ninth response message 1952 arrives with each attribute value greater than the current maximum value in the respective evaluator queue. As a result, no new scores need be computed, since there is no possibility that a score computed for the ninth response message could be lower than any of the scores currently residing in the master queue. The ninth response is thus immediately rejected and the queue state 1954 remains unchanged.

A Distributed Resource-Exchange System that Aggregates a Large Number of Data Centers to Create a Distributed, Multi-Organization Cloud-Computing and Resource-Sharing Facility

FIGS. 20A-E illustrate the concept of resource exchange among cloud-computing facilities, data centers, and other computing facilities. FIGS. 20A-D all use similar illustration conventions, next described with reference to FIG. 20A.

FIG. 20A shows abstract representations of four different computing facilities 2002-2005. In each large rectangle representing each computing facility, smaller squares represent a capacity for hosting a VM. Squares without cross-hatching, such as square 2006, represent a currently unused capacity for hosting a VM and cross-hatched squares, such as square 2008, represent a currently in-use capacity for hosting a VM. Of course, real-world computing facilities generally have the resources and capacities to host hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, or more VMs, but, for current concept-illustration purposes, the 24-VM-hosting capacity of each illustrated computing facility 2002-2005 is sufficient. It should be noted that, in the current document, the computational resources used to host a VM are used as an example of a resource that can be exchanged between computing facilities. The computational resources used to host a container is another example of a resource that can be exchanged between computing facilities. Virtual machines and containers are both examples of computational-resources-consuming entities that can be hosted by computing facilities.

As shown in FIG. 20A, the computing facility DC1 2002 has no spare or unused VM hosting capacity. Computing facilities DC2 2003 and DC3 2004 each have unused capacity for hosting eight additional VMs while computing facility DC4 has unused capacity for hosting three additional VMs. Unused capacity can arise within a computing facility for many reasons. A computing facility may have been expanded to accommodate a planned project or division, but the project or division may not yet need the expanded computational resources or may have been cancelled. In many cases, computational-facility administrators may maintain additional, spare capacity to be able to instantly respond to increased demand from internal users or from remote clients of internally hosted web services and applications. In some cases, the owners and/or managers of a computational facility may have configured the computational facility for providing computational resources as a service to remote clients. The amount of unused capacity within a given computational facility may fluctuate widely and over very short time spans, in certain operational states, or may remain fairly stable, over days, weeks, or months. Currently, for computing facilities other than those specifically established to provide resources as a service, there are few methodologies and media for safely and conveniently making unused capacity available to remote systems and users.

The distributed resource-exchange system facilitates leasing or donating unused computational resources, such as capacity for hosting VMs, by computing facilities to remote computing facilities and users. The distributed resource-exchange system provides a type of automated computational-resource brokerage that brokers exchange of computational resources among participant computing facilities, allowing computational resources to be conveniently, securely, and rationally shared among many different computing facilities owned and managed by many different participant organizations. At a high-level perspective, the automated computational-resource brokerage is a computational-facility-aggregation optimization subsystem that allows for applying computational resources to tasks that need them across a potentially enormous number of discrete computing facilities owned and managed by many different organizations. The distributed resource-exchange system provides efficient brokerage through automation, through use of the above-discussed methods and systems for distributed search, and through use of efficient services provided by virtualization layers with computing facilities, including virtual management networks, secure virtual internal data centers, and secure VM migration services provided by virtualization layers. The automated computational-resource brokerage is convenient and easy to use for administrators, managers, and other users of commutating facilities seeking to sell, donate, or otherwise provide local resources to remote computing-facility resource consumers because of simplified user interfaces, because of predefined attributes, filters, profiles, and easily accessible information about resource providers and resource consumers, and because of a wealth of automated methodologies that streamline searches for resources, transactions that provide resources for defined periods of time to resource consumers, collection of user feedback, and generation of rankings, ratings, and recommendations to facilitate future searchers for resources and resource-acquisition transactions. The automated computational-resource brokerage is rational because the brokerage provides a wealth of information to resource providers and resource consumers in order that participants are fully informed with regard to available resources and their attributes, and because this information is incorporated into automated methods and systems that allow the wealth of information to be constantly updated and to be used by automated distributed-search methods. The automated computational-resource brokerage provides secure remote hosting of VMs, secure data transmission and storage, secure internal and external network communications, and other security measures to ensure that resources provided by remote computing facilities are as secure, or nearly as secure, as local resources used by resource consumers.

FIG. 20B illustrates an initial step in resource exchange. Computing facilities DC2 2003 and DC3 2004 have registered as participants with the automated computational-resource brokerage in order to make their spare VM-hosting capacity available to remote resource consumers. As shown in FIG. 20B, they have provided attribute values 2010 and 2012 to the automated computational-resource brokerage indicating that they are interested in selling VM-hosting capacity. As discussed above, certain of these attribute values are provided during registration, others are provided in response to static-attribute requests, and still others are provided in response to information-request messages. Attributes such as the current price for VM hosting and current hosting capacity are likely to be provided in response to information-request messages, while the types of hosting services and long-term hosting capacities may be provided in response to static-attribute requests. The fact that computing facilities DC2 and DC3 are automated-computational-resource-brokerage participants is obtained during registration with the automated brokerage.

In FIG. 20C, the administrator of computing facility DC1 2003 realizes that all hosting capacity is currently in use within the computing facility. As a result, the administrator can either seek to physically expand the computing facility with new servers and other components or seek to obtain computational resources for remote providers, both for launching new VMs as well as for offloading currently executing VMs. As shown in FIG. 20C, the administrator has elected to register as a participant with the automated computational-resource brokerage and has initiated a search for one or more remote provider-participants to host five VMs 2014.

In FIG. 20D, the administrator of computing facility DC1 2002 has received search results 2016 from the automated computational-resource brokerage. The administrator, or automated resource-acquisition functionality within a local client instance of the automated computational-resource brokerage, can choose with which provider to transact for VM hosting, or can transact with both providers for hosting a different subset of the five VMs. Note that, during the time that the search was initiated, as discussed above with reference to FIG. 20C, and when initial information may have been returned from computing facility DC2 to computing facility DC1, several new VMs have been hosted by computing facility DC2. However, because the distributed search verifies respondents prior to returning search results, as discussed above, the search results 2016 accurately reflect the current hosting capacity of computing facility DC2.

In FIG. 20E, the administrator of computing facility DC1, or automated resource-acquisition functionality within a local client instance of the automated computational-resource brokerage, has decided to transact for hosting the five VMs with computing facility DC2. As shown by the dashed lines 2016 that demarcate the 5 DC1 VMs 2018-2022 hosted by computing facility DC2, the VMs are hosted in a secure hosting partition so that neither the executing VMs nor the internal resources that they use within computing facility DC2 can be accessed or observed by DC2 entities or users. These 5 hosted VMs can be thought of as running within an extension of the DC1 computing facility.

FIGS. 21A-B illustrate implementation of the automated computational-resource brokerage within multiple distributed computing facilities. The implementation of the computational-resource brokerage mirrors implementation of the distributed-search subsystem discussed above with reference to FIGS. 11B-C. The management subsystem is again shown, in FIG. 21A, using the same numeric labels used previously in FIG. 11B. In addition to the distributed-search web application 1128 that represents a local instance of the distributed-search subsystem within a server cluster, virtual data center, or some other set of computational resources within the distributed computer system, the management system provides an execution environment for a cloud-exchange web application 2102 that represents a local instance of the automated computational-resource brokerage within the server cluster. In certain implementations, the distributed-search web application 1128 may be incorporated within the cloud-exchange web application. The cloud-exchange web application 2102 provides a cloud-exchange UI (2104 in FIG. 21B) through which users can register as participants, update participant information, develop exchange policies and filters, set up automated resource-provision and resource-consumption agents within the automated computational-resource brokerage, and monitor exchanges, transactions, and other activities.

As shown in FIG. 21B, the local instance of the automated computational-resource brokerage, or cloud-exchange web application (2102 in FIG. 21A) exchanges requests and responses with a cloud-exchange engine 2105, in one implementation implemented as a a multi-tiered application containing multiple cloud-exchange engine virtual machines 2106-2109 that run within a server 2110 or other computer system within the distributed computer system. The cloud-exchange engine maintains centralized attribute values and other data for the automated computational resource brokerage, monitors transactions, carries out transactions for computational resources on behalf of participants, collects feedback and maintains ratings and/or rankings of participants, provides many default filters and policies, and carries out many additional functions that together comprise the automated computational-resource brokerage.

FIG. 22 illustrates the general implementation of the cloud-exchange engine (2105 in FIG. 21B). The general implementation of the cloud-exchange engine 2202 mirrors that of the distributed-search engine 2204, discussed above with reference to FIG. 14. Incoming request and response messages are received in a general input queue 2206 and outgoing responses and requests are queued to a general output queue 2208. FIG. 14 is a high-level diagram of the distributed-search engine. There are many different types of messages received and transmitted by the cloud-exchange engine. Different types of messages can be thought of as being distributed from the input queue 2206 to input queues for specific message types, such as input queues 2210-2212. Similarly, specific types of output messages are output to specific output queues, such as output queue 2214-2216, from which they are input to the general output queue 2208 for transmission. Various different types of controllers or logic modules 2218-2220 process particular types of input messages and generate particular types of output messages. For example, controller 2218 receives registration requests and additional requests within registration dialogues and returns responses to those requests. Searches for resources, also considered to be requests for resource consumption or initiation of resource auctions, are processed by a search-pre-processing module 2222 before being input as search requests to the distributed-search engine. Search responses, or bids from resource-provider participants, are processed by a search-post-processing module 2224 before being returned to the resource-consumption participant that initiated the search or auction. Of course, many alternative implementations, including implementations that incorporate distributed-search logic directly within the cloud-exchange engine, are possible.

Resource-Exchange Life Cycle as Represented by a Resource-Exchange Context

In many implementations of the above-described resource-exchange system, each resource exchange involves a well-defined set of operations, or process, the current state of which is encoded in a resource-exchange context that is stored in memory by the resource-exchange system to facilitate execution of the operations and tracking and monitoring of the resource-exchange process. The well-defined set of operations, and the state changes associated with those operations, define the life cycle of a resource exchange within the resource-exchange system. Resource-exchange contexts are physical components of the resource-exchange system. Resource-exchange contexts persistently store policy information and state information that can be electronically accessed during resource-exchange-system operations. Resource-exchange contexts are also control components of resource-exchange system, organizing and driving the many different tasks carried out by many different resource-exchange-system components within many different computing facilities.

To facilitate understanding of the following discussion, terminology used to describe the resource-exchange system and resource-exchange-system components is next presented. The phrase “resource-exchange system” refers to a large number of computing facilities owned and managed by many different organizations that are partially aggregated to allow the computing facilities to share portions of their computational resources with other computing facilities. The phrase “resource-exchange context” refers to the information stored in memories and mass-storage devices of the resource-exchange system that encodes an indication of the current state of a particular resource exchange, a buy policy associated with the resource exchange, an active search context during at least an auction phase of the lifecycle of the resource exchange, and additional information. The phrase “resource exchange” is an exchange of a computational resource, provided for a specified time period by a resource-provider computing facility, for a fee, service, or computational resource provided by a resource-consumer computing facility. The cloud-exchange system is an automated computational-resource brokerage system, as discussed in the preceding section. The resource provider and the resource consumer, both computing-facility participants in a resource exchange, each includes a local cloud-exchange instance which provides a cloud-exchange UI and which carries out client-side tasks in support of a resource exchange that is managed by the cloud-exchange system.

FIGS. 23A-G illustrate, for one implementation of the resource-exchange system, the process by which resource needs are communicated from resource consumers to resource providers, resource providers offer resources to resource consumers, one or more resource providers are selected for provision of particular resources via a distributed-search-engine-mediated resource-provision auction, and resources are allocated on behalf of resource consumers by the one or more selected resource providers. In the implementation described below, the cloud-exchange system receives requests, from resource consumers, to place virtual machines into computing facilities of resource consumers for execution. Of course, this represents only one of many possible resource exchanges. The cloud-exchange system identifies candidate computing facilities for placement of the virtual machines using a distributed-search-based auction, receives bids for executing the virtual machines by candidate computing facilities, and selects computing facilities for placement of the virtual machines based on the received bids. The cloud-exchange system uses a third-party transaction system for carrying out financial transactions associated with placement and execution of virtual machines by resource-provider computing facilities on behalf of resource-consuming computing facilities. The process by which virtual machines are placed for execution is complex, policy driven, and generally fully automated, although semi-automated virtual-machine placement is also supported by the cloud-exchange system. Because of the complexity and information-driven characteristics of virtual-machine placement by the cloud-exchange system, resource-exchange contexts are necessary for organizing, initiating, and tracking the complex informational, resource, and financial transactions involved in virtual-machine placement.

FIG. 23A illustrates, in block-diagram form, a resource consumer, the cloud-exchange system, and a resource provider that are involved in resource exchange that comprises virtual-machine placement and execution along with various types of information maintained within the resource consumer, the cloud-exchange system, and the resource provider to facilitate virtual-machine placement. The resource consumer 2302, a computing facility that contracts with one or more resource-provider computing facilities for execution of one or more virtual machines, includes a local cloud-exchange instance. The cloud-exchange system 2304 is an automated computational-exchange brokerage system that carries out matching of resource consumers to resource providers, using the distributed-search methods discussed above in previous subsections, placement of virtual machines, and initiating financial transactions at the completion of virtual-machine execution. The resource provider 2306, a computing facility that hosts virtual machines for resource consumers, includes a local cloud-exchange instance. A computing facility may be both a resource consumer and a resource provider. Such computing facilities may offload their own virtual machines of relatively little importance and priority to other computing facilities through the resource-exchange system in order to host more important and higher priority virtual machines on behalf of other computing facilities. The cloud-exchange system may act as a complex, near-real time load balancing and load optimization engine for the computing facilities that are both resource providers and resource consumers.

A resource consumer 2302 maintains descriptions, and may maintain executables, for currently non-executing virtual machines 2306-2307 and generally hosts a number of currently executing virtual machines 2308. In addition, for each described virtual machine or executing virtual machine, the resource consumer generally maintains information about the operational characteristics of the virtual machine 2309, referred to as a “VM personality.” A resource consumer maintains various attribute-value pairs that describe the resource consumer, including dynamic attribute-value pairs 2310 and static attribute-value pairs 2311. The dynamic and static natures of the attribute-value pairs are those described above, in a previous subsection, in which the distributed-search method used by the cloud-exchange system is described. The resource consumer also maintains one or more by policies, such as buy policy 2312. A buy policy is a policy comprising a set of filters, as discussed in the preceding subsection describing the distributed-search method. A resource provider 2306 contains one or more sell policies, such as sell policy 2314, dynamic 2316 and static 2318 attribute-value pairs describing the resource provider and hosting services offered by the resource provider, pricing information 2320 used for calculating hosting bids, and a great deal of additional information 2322 regarding current load and capacity for hosting virtual machines on behalf of resource consumers. In addition, a resource provider may maintain data related to the performance characteristics of various types of virtual machines hosted by the resource provider 2324.

The cloud-exchange system 2304 includes various types of data associated with cloud-exchange participants, such as the data 2326 maintained for a participant P₀. This data may include a copy of static attributes 2328, operational and performance characteristics of virtual machines associated with the participant 2329, additional data describing the participant and the participants virtual-machine-hosting and virtual-machine-outsourcing activities 2330, and additional context information associated with the participant 2331. The virtual-machine placement process employs an auction carried out by the above-described distributed-search engine. The auction is essentially a distributed search for resource providers that can best host one or more virtual machines on behalf of a resource consumer. During the auction, and during virtual-machine hosting, the cloud-exchange system maintains an active search context 2332 for each resource exchange involving placement and execution of one or more virtual machines. The active search context is a significant portion of the resource-exchange context maintained by the cloud-exchange system. However, the resource-exchange context additionally includes information stored in a resource consumer, information stored in a resource provider, and information associated with both the resource consumer and resource provider stored within the cloud-exchange system.

FIG. 23B illustrates certain initial process steps of the virtual-machine placement and execution process carried out within a resource consumer. In FIG. 23B, and in subsequently described FIGS. 23C-G, a resource consumer, resource provider, and the cloud-exchange system are represented by large rectangles, such as large rectangle 2336 representing a resource consumer in FIG. 23 B. Two such rectangles with a small arrow in between, such as rectangles 2336-2337 in FIG. 23B and small arrow 2338, represent a change of state within a single resource consumer, resource provider, or the cloud-exchange system represented by the two rectangles. Larger arrows, such as arrow 2339 in FIG. 23C, portions of which are contained within large rectangles, represent transmission of data among the Client-Exchange system, resource consumer, and resource provider.

In an initial step shown in FIG. 23B, a systems administrator or another member of an organization managing a resource-consumer computing facility manually associates a buy policy 2340, through the UI provided by the local cloud-exchange instance, with a set of one or more virtual machines 2341. The association of a buy policy with a set of one or more virtual machines renders the one or more virtual machines potential candidates for outsourcing to one or more resource providers. The buy policy includes various filters that specify a resource-outsourcing policy for one or more virtual machines. The policy may include specifications of desired hosting parameters and parameter ranges, such as a maximum desired migration time, minimum and maximum network latency, resource-provider support policies, resource-provider characteristics, including reputation, resource-consumer and resource-provider eviction policies, the amount of various types of resources needed for virtual-machine execution, a scoring function for scoring bids for virtual-machine hosting submitted by resource providers through the auction process, and other such policy components. The buy policy essentially defines the computational resources desired by the resource consumer and the constraints and parameters that define resource-consumer-desired selection of one or more resource providers for hosting the resource consumer's virtual machines.

In a next step, a buy-policy-associated set of one or more virtual machines 2342 is activated 2343. Activation may be carried out manually, by interaction of a system administrator or other employee of the organization managing the resource-consumer computing facility with a UI provided by the local cloud-exchange instance. Alternatively, activation may occur automatically in response to an alert or trigger generated within the local cloud-exchange instance. As an example, the local cloud-exchange instance may be configured to generate an alert when resource capacities within the resource consumer fall below minimum threshold values or rise above other threshold values. As another example, the local cloud-exchange instance may be configured to generate triggers at specified future times or when particular conditions arise within the resource-exchange system. Once a buy-policy-associated set of one or more virtual machines has been activated, the local cloud-exchange instance within the resource consumer generates an initiation-request message 2344 and transmits the initiation-request message to the cloud-exchange system. The initiation-request message 2344 contains descriptions of the one or more VMs that the resource consumer seeks to outsource, the buy policy associated with the one or more virtual machines, and may additionally include VM personality information and selected dynamic attributes describing the resource consumer. Of course, rather than a single initiation-request message, the resource consumer and cloud-exchange system may exchange multiple messages, in certain implementations, to initiate a resource exchange.

FIG. 23C illustrates initial cloud-exchange-system process steps in the virtual-machine placement and execution process. The initiation-request message 2344, generated and transmitted by the resource consumer, is received by the cloud-exchange system 2304. In response to receiving the initiation-request message, the cloud-exchange system uses information contained in the initiation-request message as well as additional information contained in resource-consumer-associated information stored by the cloud-exchange system 2345 to prepare an active search context 2346 to represent the virtual-machine placement and execution task. As mentioned above, the active search context 2346, discussed in a previous subsection describing the distributed-search method used by the cloud-exchange system, is a significant portion of the resource-exchange context that maintains state information for the resource exchange. In certain cases, the active search context 2346 is temporarily queued to a wait queue 2347 until, at a time specified in the buy policy associated with the set of one or more virtual machines to be outsourced, an alert or trigger 2348 results in initiation of an auction of the outsourcing request. In other cases, the cloud-exchange system immediately proceeds to a next step in which an auction of the outsourcing request is initiated 2349.

Initiation of the auction involves numerous tasks and operations. The master queue and evaluator queues 2350, described above, are allocated and/or initiated, and the active search context is prepared for the auction process. The active search context may be inserted, for example, into a list or other data structure containing active search contexts represented outsourcing requests currently under bid. The cloud-exchange system uses information in the buy policy contained in the initiation-request message as well as static resource-provider information maintained in the cloud-exchange system to filter resource providers participating in the resource-exchange system in order to prepare an initial set of candidate resource providers for the resource exchange. In addition, the cloud-exchange system may transmit information requests, including information request 2351, to the candidate resource providers and receive and process information-request responses, such as information-request response 2352, in order to further filter the initial set of candidate resource providers based on dynamic attributes furnished by the candidate resource providers in the information-request responses. Much of the resource-provider information is extracted from one or more seller policies maintained by resource providers. Like buy policies, seller policies are composed of one or more filters that specify various attribute values or ranges of attribute values, as discussed above in the subsection describing the distributed-search method and system. Seller policies, for example, may specify minimum and maximum lease periods, pricing information for various types of computational resources, exclusion sets based on the areas of commerce in which potential resource consumers are involved, and many other parameters and characteristics particular to the resource provider. In a first implementation, the cloud-exchange system prepares a final list of candidate resource providers, sends bid requests to each of the candidate resource providers, such as bid request 2353, receives bid responses, such as bid response 2354, from the candidate resource providers, and processes the bid responses using the master queue and evaluator queues 2350, as described in the previous subsection that describes the distributed-search method and engine used by the cloud-exchange system. In a second implementation, rather than sending bid requests to remote resource providers, the cloud-exchange system automatically generates candidate-resource-provider bids on behalf of the candidate resource providers, based on information maintained within the cloud-exchange system that was previously supplied by candidate resource providers. In essence, the two implementations represent either a direct, real-time search for remote resource providers that involves communications with remote candidate resource providers or a search for resource providers based on information already obtained from remote resource providers. The second implementation, which searches for resource providers based on already obtained information, may often provide greater search efficiency and faster response times. Both implementations logically employ the previously discussed distributed-search method and engine.

FIG. 23D illustrates processing of a bid request by a resource provider according to the first implementation, discussed above, in which a direct, real-time search for remote resource providers is carried out. Information in the bid request 2356 may be extracted and stored 2357 by the resource provider. Information in the bid request 2356 is used to prepare a bid-request response 2358 that includes a calculated bid for hosting the set of one or more virtual machines represented by the bid request based on a variety of different types of information maintained within the resource provider. These activities are carried out, of course, by a local cloud-exchange instance within the resource consumer. The bid-request response 2358 is finally returned to the cloud-exchange system. In the second implementation, the bid response is prepared by the cloud-exchange engine on behalf of the resource provider.

FIG. 23E illustrates processing steps following the auction-based selection of one or more final candidate resource providers. As discussed above, during the auction, bids are maintained within the master queue and evaluator queues based on computed scores for the bids, with the scores computed from a weighted set of score-evaluation terms. When all of the candidate resource providers have responded to bid requests or when bids have been automatically generated by the cloud-exchange system on behalf of all candidate resource providers, the results from the auction are processed to determine whether or not the auction has successfully concluded. This determination is made based on buy-policy information and other parameters and considerations. When the auction has not successfully completed, the cloud-exchange system may reissue information requests to candidate resource providers in order to update resource-provider information and prepare a modified set of candidate resource providers. The cloud-exchange system may then reissue bid requests, according to the first implementation discussed above, or may automatically generate bids on behalf of the candidate resource providers, according to the second implementation, discussed above, and, in either case, continue to seek qualified resource providers. Once the action has successfully concluded, the resource providers with bids in the master queue are considered to be a set of final resource-provider candidates. The Client-Exchange system verifies the resource provider which has submitted the highest-scored bid by sending out one or more information-request messages 2360 and receiving information-request responses 2362 that are processed to determine whether the resource provider is capable of hosting the one or more virtual machines on behalf of the resource consumer according to the winning bid and other policy-based considerations. When the resource provider which submitted the highest-scored bid cannot be verified, the cloud-exchange system attempts to verify any additional final candidate resource providers in descending score order until either a final verified resource provider is obtained or the set of bids in the master queue is exhausted. When a verified resource provider is identified by the cloud-exchange system, the Client-Exchange system carries out message-based dialogues 2364-2371 in order to coordinate placement of the one or more resource-consumer virtual machines within the resource-provider computing facility for execution. Once the one or more virtual machines have been successfully placed and launched, the active search context 2346 is placed into an under-execution queue 2373 or otherwise marked, by the cloud-exchange System, to indicate that the active search context is no longer actively participating in an auction.

FIG. 23F illustrates virtual-machine-placement-and-execution process steps following successful completion of an auction. The resource consumer 2302 and resource provider 2306, in cooperation with the cloud-exchange system, transfer either a description of a VM to the resource provider 2376 or carry out one of various different types of executing-VM migration operations 2377 to place the one or more VMs and launch execution of the one or more VMs within the resource provider. In the first case, the information transferred to the resource provider is sufficient for the resource provider to build a VM executable and launch execution of the VM executable within the resource-provider computing facility. In certain cases, this involves transferring a custom VM previously constructed by the resource consumer to the resource provider. As discussed above, a VM may be encapsulated within an OVF package in order to transfer the VM from one computing system to another. Alternatively, the resource consumer may have specified a desire for the resource provider to run, on behalf of the resource consumer, one or more stock VMs already resident within the resource provider. For example, the resource consumer may wish to run a particular application program that is already incorporated within a VM template by the resource provider. In the second case, there are a variety of different types of executing-VM migration technologies. Cold migration involves halting or stalling execution of the VM executing within the resource-consumer computing facility, then transferring the VM to the resource provider, and then restarting the VM. Hot migration allows an executing VM to migrate from one computing facility to another without being halted. Other types of migration involve migrating a portion of an executing VM to the resource provider while other portions of the executing VM, such as certain stored data, continue to reside within the resource-consumer computing facility.

The one or more virtual machines execute within the resource-a provider computing facility for some specified period of time, such as for the duration of a well-defined lease. The Clown-Exchange system provides various mechanisms by which leases can be prematurely terminated by one of the cloud-exchange system, the resource consumer, or the resource provider. The ramifications of premature termination differ depending on the source of the termination request. In some cases, a prematurely terminated virtual machine may automatically be requeued for a subsequent auction.

As shown in FIG. 23G, whether as a result of a trigger or an alert 2380 indicating expiration of a lease or as a result of a premature termination of a lease, referred to as an “eviction,” the active search context 2346 is removed from the under-execution queue 2373, or otherwise reactivated, and the cloud-exchange system communicates with both the resource provider 2382-2383 and the resource consumer 2384-2385 to coordinate post-execution tasks involved in completing the resource exchange. This may involve, for example, migration of one or more virtual machines back to the resource consumer or to another resource provider. In addition, the cloud-exchange system provides information 2386 to a third-party financial-transaction system that handles the financial transaction by which the resource provider is compensated for hosting the resource consumer's one or more virtual machines.

The various process steps described above with reference to FIGS. 23A-G are intended to illustrate and describe common process steps at an overview level. There are, of course, many possible special cases that arise during a resource exchange that may involve additional process steps and additional complexities. While a general indication of the types of information transfers that occur during a resource exchange is provided in the above discussion with reference to FIGS. 23A-G, any particular cloud-exchange implementation may employ additional or different information transfers to facilitate resource exchanges.

It is important to note that the resource-exchange context, which includes an indication of the current state of a resource exchange as well as many different types of information that characterize and facilitate the resource exchange, is a fundamental organizational component of the resource-exchange system. A resource-exchange context is implemented as digitally-encoded information stored in physical data-storage devices, such as electronic memories and mass-storage devices. As such, the resource-exchange context is a physical component of the resource-exchange system that is, in effect, distributed across resource consumers, resource providers, and the cloud-exchange System. The resource-exchange context, including the sequence of state changes encoded within the resource-exchange context, defines operation of the resource-exchange system with respect to each resource exchange. The resource-exchange process can be generally subdivided into three distinct phases: (1) a pre-auction phase; (2) an auction phase; and (3) a post-auction phase. The pre-auction phase includes association of buy policies with sets of virtual machines, virtual-machine activation, and generation and sending of an initiation-request message from a resource consumer to the cloud-exchange system. The auction phase includes generation of an active search context, generating a set of initial candidate resource providers, requesting bids from the candidate resource providers, scoring and queuing returned bids, selecting final candidate resource providers, and verifying a selected resource provider by the cloud-exchange system. The post-auction phase includes migrating the one or more virtual machines to the computing facility for the selected resource provider or building the one or more virtual machines within the computing facility and monitoring virtual-machine execution in order to detect and handle virtual-machine-execution termination, including initiating a financial transaction for compensating the resource provider for hosting one or more virtual machines.

FIGS. 24A-C show the states associated with a resource exchange, and the transitions between the states, that define the VM placement and execution process for the described implementation of the cloud-exchange System and that define the lifecycle of a resource-exchange context and the particular resource exchange represented by the resource-exchange context. In FIGS. 24A-C, states are represented by labeled circles and state transitions are represented by curved arrows. A resource context, as discussed above, includes various types of stored information within the local cloud-exchange instances of resource consumers and resource providers as well as stored information within the cloud-exchange system. For much of the lifecycle of a resource exchange, an active search context stored within the cloud-exchange system is a significant component of the resource-exchange context. During all phases of the life cycle of the resource exchange, the current state of the resource exchange is continuously maintained within the resource-exchange context. The current state defines the remaining sequence of tasks that need to be completed by each of the participants in the resource exchange in order to successfully complete the resource exchange.

FIG. 24 a provides a resource-consumer-centric state-transition diagram for a particular resource exchange. The resource-exchange system is considered to be in an initial state 2402 preceding the resource exchange. In the initial state, many other resource exchanges may be in progress within the resource-exchange system. However, the currently discussed state-transition diagrams are intended to illustrate the lifecycle for a particular resource exchange independently from the many other resource exchanges and other events that may be concurrently and simultaneously occurring within the resource exchange system. For simplicity of illustration, it is assumed that a particular resource exchange involves one or more virtual machines that execute together within a particular host. It is also possible for the virtual machines of a set of one or more virtual machines to be placed into two or more different hosts. However, in this case, each of the placements can be considered to be a separate resource exchange, with the process for each separate resource exchange generally described by the state-transition diagrams provided in FIGS. 24A-C.

The resource-exchange state transitions from the initial state to a buy-policy-assigned state 2403 as a result of manual assignment, by a system administrator or other employee of the organization managing a resource-consumer computing facility, of a buy-policy to one or more virtual machines. In certain implementations, this is carried out through a local cloud-exchange user interface. In one implementation, the virtual machines may be represented by icons that can be grouped together into folders or aggregations. Buy policies may be similarly represented by icons that can be dragged and dropped onto the folders or aggregations by mouse operations directed to the local user interface. The same user interface also allows a buy policy associated with a set of one or more virtual machines to be unassigned, resulting in transition from the buy-policy-assigned state 2403 back to the initial state 2402. These transitions are represented by curved arrows 2404-2405. In the following discussion, particular transitions between states are not numerically labeled, since the curved arrows representing transitions are annotated.

In the buy-policy-assigned state, a set of one or more virtual machines can be thought of as a potential resource exchange. An activation event promotes such potential resource exchanges to candidate-resource-exchange status, represented by the activated state 2406. Activation events generally fall into two broad categories of manual activation and automated activation. Manual activation involves interaction of a user with the UI provided by the local cloud-exchange instance within the resource-consumer computing facility. Automated activation can occur due to alerts and triggers, electronic events that arise when certain additional events occur or when specified conditions arise within the resource-exchange system. The local cloud-exchange instance may be configured to generate, according to the buy-policy, alerts and/or triggers at specific points in time or when various different types of conditions obtain. As one example, an alert may be triggered when the available capacity for data storage or task execution within the computing facility falls below threshold levels. There are, of course, many different possible conditions or specifications that lead to automated triggers and alerts which, in turn, lead to activation of a buy-policy-assigned set of one or more virtual machines. Once a set of one or more virtual machines is activated, the local cloud-exchange instance prepares an initiation-request message for transmission to the cloud-exchange system, which is accompanied by a transition of the resource-exchange state to the initiation-request-message-prepared state 2407. The local cloud-exchange instance then sends the initiation-request message to the cloud-exchange system. When the initiation-request message is successfully sent, the state of the resource exchange transitions to the placement-requested state 2408. A failure to transmit the message returns the resource-exchange state to the initiation-request-message-prepared state, in which additional attempts to send the initiation-request message may be undertaken. After a sufficient number of failures, the resource-exchange state transitions back to the buy-policy-assigned state 2403, often with various types of error logging and error reporting to the local user interface. In alternative implementations, repeated send failures may result in a transition of the resource-exchange state back to the activated state 2406.

The next states in FIG. 24A, described below, are again shown in FIG. 24B. The transitions between these states involve process steps carried out primarily by the cloud-exchange system and a resource-provider system selected to host the set of one or more VMs. Nonetheless, the local cloud-exchange instance within the resource-consumer computing facility is aware of these state transitions, in many implementations.

The resource-exchange state transitions from the placement-requested state 2408 to the placed state 2409 once the Client-Exchange system places the one or more virtual machines with a selected host computing facility, or resource provider. Once the set of one or more virtual machines has been placed, a successful transfer of build instructions or a successful migration of the one or more virtual machines from the resource-consumer computing facility to the host results in a transition of the resource-exchange state to the transferred state 2410. However, a failure to transfer the build data or to migrate the set of one or more virtual machines results in a transition of the resource-exchange state to the buy-policy-assigned state 2403, in one implementation. In alternative implementations, transitions to other states are possible when, for example, the cloud-exchange system is able to recover from such transfer failures by placing the one or more virtual machines with another host. From the transferred state 2410, the resource-exchange state transitions to the running state 2411 when the one or more virtual machines are successfully configured and launched within the host system. Of course, during a hot migration, the configuration and launching step is merged with the migration step. Execution failure of the one or more virtual machines returns the resource-exchange state to the transferred state 2410. A successful launch of execution or re-start of execution of the one or more VMs returns the resource-exchange state to the running state 2411. Multiple execution failures may result in a transition from the transferred state to the terminated state 2412. In the running state 2411, the one or more virtual machines continue to execute until expiration of the current lease, the occurrence of a resource-consumer eviction, a host eviction, or a cloud-exchange eviction, or the occurrence of other types of execution-termination events. When the original placement request has not yet been satisfied, the resource-exchange state transitions from the terminated state back to the placement-requested state 2408 from which the Client-Exchange system can again place of the one or more virtual machines with a host for continued execution. When the initial placement request is satisfied, the resource-exchange state transitions back to the buy-policy-assigned state 2403.

FIG. 24B provides a Client-Exchange-system-centric resource-exchange state-transition diagram. This state-transition diagram includes three states already shown in FIG. 24A and discussed above. These three states are shown in with dashed circles rather than solid circles. When execution of the one or more virtual machines terminates, and the resource exchange is therefore currently in the terminated state 2412, the resource-exchange state briefly transitions to the charge-for-VM-execution-calculated state 2414 when the cloud-exchange system collects the information for the terminated execution of the one or more virtual machines and computes a charge for the terminated execution. The resource-exchange state transitions back to the terminated state 2412 once the cloud-exchange system sends the fee information and calculated fee to a third-party transaction service. The third-party transaction service carries out the financial transactions needed for transfer of the calculated fee from the resource consumer to the resource provider. There are many different types and modes for these transaction services. The calculated fees may be automatically withdrawn from deposit accounts, in certain cases, or the third-party transaction service may forward electronic or paper bills to the organization that manages the resource- and consumer computing facility. When an initiation-request message has been received by the Client-Exchange system, and the resource-exchange state is in the placement-requested state 2408, the resource-exchange state transitions to the placement-request-received state 2415. When initiation of an auction is delayed, according to the buy-policy associated with the set of one or more virtual machines or because of bandwidth limitations within the Client-Exchange system, the resource-exchange state transitions to the placement-request-queued state 2416. Otherwise, the resource-exchange state transitions to the active-context-initialized state 2417 when the cloud-exchange system uses the information transferred in the initiation-request message, along with information stored within the cloud-exchange system, to prepare an active search context for the placement request. The occurrence of a trigger or alert results in a transition from the placement-request-queued state 2416 to the active-search-context-initialized state 2417. The resource-exchange state transitions from the active-search-context-initialized state 2417 to the candidate-sellers-determined state 2418 when the Client-Exchange system applies buy-policy filters and other information to select an initial candidate set of resource providers. In certain cases, additional information may be solicited by the cloud-exchange system from resource providers to facilitate selection of the initial candidate resource-providers set. Once an initial set of candidate resource providers has been determined, the resource-exchange state transitions to the bids-solicited state 2419 following transmission, by the Client-Exchange system, of bid solicitations to each of the initial candidate resource providers. When, after a reasonable period of time, one or more of the candidate resource providers has not responded to the bid solicitation, the resource-exchange state may transition back to the candidate-sellers-determined state 2418 in order for additional bid solicitations to be sent out by the Client-Exchange system to non-responding candidate resource providers. In the bids-solicited state 2419, the Client-Exchange system transitions to the quote-generated-and-queued state 2420 upon receiving and processing each bid before returning to the bids-solicited state 2419 to await further bids, when bids have not been received from all candidate resource providers. When the final bid has been received, and a quote generated and queued for the bid, and when bid-closure conditions have been met, the resource-exchange state transitions to the successful-bid-closure state 2421. When, however, one of various different types of termination conditions have instead arisen, the resource-exchange state transitions to the placement-failure state 2422. Otherwise, the resource-exchange state may transition back to the candidate-sellers-determined state 2418 for an immediate or a delayed subsequent round of bid solicitations. When no final candidate resource providers have been obtained following a maximum number of bid-solicitation attempts, or when one of many different types of termination conditions obtain, the resource-exchange state transitions from the candidate-sellers-determined state 2418 to the placement-failure state 2422. When a bid-closure condition obtains while the resource-exchange state is the candidate-sellers-determined state 2418, the resource-exchange state transitions to the successful-bid-closure state 2421. In the second, often more efficient implementation discussed above, the bids are generated by the cloud-exchange engine automatically, on behalf of the candidate resource providers, in which case the bids-solicited state 2319 and the quote-generated-and-queued state 2320 are merged with the candidate-sellers-determined state 2318. In this second implementation, the cloud-exchange engine automatically bids on behalf of the identified candidate sellers and transitions to successful-bid-closure state 2321 or placement-failure state 2322. When the Client-Exchange system is able to successively verify one of the final candidate resource providers, the resource-exchange state transitions to the verified-seller-found state 2423. Otherwise, a transition to the placement-failure state 2422 occurs. From the verified-seller-found state 2423, the resource-exchange state transitions to the previously described placed state 2409. The resource-exchange state transitions from the placement-failure state 2422 to the previously described placement-request-received state 2415.

Of course, in each particular implementation of the resource-exchange system, there may be many additional states and state transitions. The currently described state-transition diagrams are intended to show those states and state transitions that are common to the reasonably large fraction of the various possible implementations of the resource-exchange system.

FIG. 24C provides a resource-provider-centric resource-exchange state-transition diagram. The resource provider is shown to inhabit an initial state 2430. When the resource provider receives an information request, the resource-exchange state transitions to the information-requested state 2431 and then returns back to the initial state when the requested information is returned to the Client-Exchange system. Similarly, when the resource provider system receives a bid request, the resource-exchange state transitions briefly to the bid-request-received state 2432 before returning to the initial state following a transmission of a computed bid request back to the cloud-exchange system. When the resource-provider system receives a winning-bid notification from the Client-Exchange System, the resource-exchange state transitions to the winning-bid-notification-received state 2433. In the winning-bid-notification-received state, the resource-provider computing facility exchanges communications with the cloud-exchange system and the local cloud-exchange instance within the resource consumer to coordinate the transfer of virtual-machine build information or migration of virtual machines to the resource provider. When the virtual machine is built by the resource provider, the resource-exchange state transitions to the build-information-received state 2434 and then to the previously described transferred state 2410 once the one or more virtual machines have been prepared for launch. The resource-exchange state transitions from the winning-bid-notification-received state 2433 to the transferred state 2410 directly when the one or more virtual machines are migrated to the resource provider. States 2410-2412 and 2403 are again shown in FIG. 24C, for completeness, but are not again described. Following termination of the execution of the one or more virtual machines, the resource-exchange state transitions to the host-post-termination state 2435. In the host-post-termination state, the resource provider exchanges communications with the cloud-exchange system to inform the cloud-exchange system of the execution termination and of the accrued fees for hosting the one or more virtual machines, cooperates with other entities to migrate the one or more virtual machines to another computing facility, in the case that the one or more virtual machines will continue to execute following lease termination or eviction, and cleans up local resources allocated for executing the one or more virtual machines within the resource-provider computing facility.

Note that the resource-exchange state is generally a combination of two or more of the states, discussed above with reference to FIGS. 24A-C, each inhabited by one or more of the resource consumer, the cloud-exchange system, and one or more resource providers. For example, the resource-exchange state may temporarily be a combination of the host-post-termination state 2435, the placement-request-receive state 2415, and the buy-policy-assigned state 2403. Note also that certain of the operations performed to affect state transitions may vary, depending on the history of state transitions for a particular resource exchange. As one example, an active search context needs only to be allocated the first time a resource exchange transitions from the placement-request-receive state 2415 to the active-search-context-initialize state 2417.

Nested-Hypervisor-Based Cloud-Exchange Implementations

FIG. 25 illustrates a nested hypervisor using illustration conventions similar to those used in FIG. 8A, above. As in FIG. 8A, FIG. 25 shows a computer system 2500 that includes a hardware layer 2502, a virtualization layer 2504, and a number of virtual machines 2506 executing within an execution environment provided by the virtualization layer 2504. The virtualization layer 2504 is one example of a hypervisor. The term “hypervisor” refers to an entity which provides an execution environment for one or more virtual machines. As discussed above with reference to FIG. 8A, the hypervisor 2504 provides a virtualized hardware interface 2508 to higher-level computational entities, such as operating systems, which are traditionally designed to execute directly above a physical hardware interface. A hypervisor provides a variety of advantages when incorporated within a computer system, including providing the ability to run applications developed to run on operating systems that are not able to run directly above the particular physical hardware interface provided by the computer system, providing a level of control of physical computational resources independent from the operating system, and providing for security measures independent from those provided by operating systems. The computer system 2500 shown in FIG. 25 differs from that shown in FIG. 8A by including a second, nested hypervisor 2510. Just as a guest operating system interfaces to the virtual hardware interface 2508 provided by a hypervisor, the nested hypervisor 2510 also interfaces to the virtual hardware interface 2508 provided by the base or parent hypervisor. The nested hypervisor 2510 executes within a first-level virtual machine 2512 that executes within the execution environment provided by the base hypervisor 2504. This allows the nested hypervisor 2510 to provide an execution environment through a virtual hardware interface 2514 to one or more second-level virtual machines 2516-2520. Depending on the workload of the second-level virtual machines running within the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor, the second-level virtual machines may experience from slight to moderate additional overheads compared with running within the first-level execution environment provided by the base hypervisor. However, nested hypervisors may provide various advantages. For example, newly developed hypervisors or newly revised hypervisors may be executed within virtual machines above a base hypervisor for testing purposes, so that the occurrence of serious errors that would crash a physical machine can instead be diagnosed through analysis and debugging facilities that execute within the execution environment provided by the base hypervisor.

FIG. 26 illustrates a computer system that includes a nested hypervisor, using simplified illustration conventions. The computer system 2600 includes a hardware layer 2602 and the base hypervisor 2604. Note that the hardware layer 2602 may span multiple discrete computer systems in the most general case. The base hypervisor provides an execution environment for four first-level virtual machines 2606-2609. The first three first-level virtual machines 2606-2608 execute application programs above guest operating systems while the fourth first-level virtual machine 2609 executes the nested virtualization layer, or nested hypervisor 2610, which provides a second-level execution environment for a number of second-level virtual machines 2612-2615. Thus, a base hypervisor may provide an execution environment both for first-level virtual machines and, via a first-level virtual machine running a nested hypervisor, for second-level virtual machines.

FIG. 27 illustrates multiple control domains within a computer system made possible by hypervisor nesting. As discussed above with reference to FIGS. 10-13, various levels of management servers may be used for managing the computational resources of distributed computing systems, including management servers such as the above-discussed VI-management-servers, cloud-director servers, and VCC servers. A management server may, for example, interface with hypervisors within computer systems of a distributed computer system to manage the distributed computer system and to provide various types of functionalities and facilities, including live migration of executing VMs, load-balancing, failover, and intelligent resource allocation. FIG. 27 shows the same computer system 2600 shown in FIG. 26, but additionally uses a cross-hatched perimeter 2702 to delineate a first management domain and a solidly shaded perimeter 2704 to delineate a second management domain within the computer system 2600. The first management domain 2706 corresponds to management of the base hypervisor 2600 by a first management server 2708. The second management domain 2710 corresponds to management of the nested hypervisor 2610 by a second management server 2712. While the two management domains overlap, to some extent, they may nonetheless represent distinct control-and-management domains that allow the second management server 2712 to manage the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor 2610 separately from, and generally without knowledge of, the first management server when the first management server is properly configured to separate the management domains. As further discussed below, employment of various techniques and technologies can, for certain types of hypervisors, provide increased separation and decreased overlap between the first-level management domain 2706 and second-level management domain 2710. The two management domains delineated by perimeters 2702 and 2704 in FIG. 27 are used in further examples and discussions that follow and are consistently referred to as the “first management domain” and the “second management domain,” respectively.

FIG. 28 illustrates implementation of two separately managed computational-resource domains within a single distributed computer system. In the FIG. 28, the distributed computer system is represented by 14 server computers 2802, including server computer 2804. A first management server 2806 manages one or more base hypervisors distributed across the 14 server computers 2802 while the second management server 2808 manages nested hypervisors running within virtual machines on eight 2710-2717 of the 14 servers. Each virtual machine in which the nested hypervisors run may be allocated a block of computational resources, as a result of which the computational resources of the distributed computer system are partitioned among a first computational-resource domain managed by the first management server 2806 and a second computational-resource domain managed by the second management server 2808. Thus, the first and second computational-resource domains are coextensive with corresponding first and second management domains. In FIG. 28, the partitioning of computational resources is shown by shading the volumes of the server-computer representations corresponding to blocks of computational resources allocated to the virtual machines running the nested hypervisors controlled by the second management server 2808. The cloud-exchange system may employ nested hypervisors within resource-provider computing facilities to create a second-level management domain and corresponding computational-resource domain under control of the cloud-exchange system within the resource-provider computing facility to enable exclusive control of a portion of the computational resources of the resource-provider computing-facility by the cloud-exchange system, as further discussed below.

FIG. 29 illustrates dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology. Dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology can also, like nested hypervisors, provide for separate control domains within computer systems. The resource-exchange system employs various types of data-security encryption-based methods, secure communications, user-identity management subsystems, network-communications isolation, participant-anonymity, and other security techniques to secure identifying information and data associated with resource-exchange-system participants and hosted computational entities from inadvertent or malicious access and use. However, since the cloud-exchange system and the cloud-exchange local instances may be implemented as sets of virtual machines, and since a primary type of computational entity that is hosted by resource-provider computing facilities is the virtual machine, which executes in an execution environment provided by a virtualization layer, the virtualization layer, itself, represents a potential security concern. Various types of computer-system and data-center management systems, for example, provide functionalities and services that allow administrators to access and control virtual-machine execution and virtual-machine-related data by employing functionalities provided by virtualization layers. In order to address security issues related to the virtualization layer, the resource-exchange system may employ dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology to provide two separate virtualization-layer-provided execution environments that are separately administered by different administrative personnel or administrative-personnel proxies. FIG. 29 shows a block diagram similar to that shown in FIG. 8A, discussed above. However, although a single hardware layer 2902 is shown in the diagram, there are two different virtualization-layer kernels 2904 and 2906 that provide execution environments to two separate sets of virtual machines 2908 and 2910. The management and administrative interfaces provided by these two different virtualization-layer kernels are entirely separate and are separately secured to allow access only to authorized administrative users and automated proxies. One of the two virtualization-layer kernels is allocated by the resource-provider computing facility to the local cloud-exchange instance while the other is used within the resource-provider computing facility for execution of native virtual machines and administration of those native resources. Thus, servers within the resource-provider computing facility that execute hosted virtual machines and the local cloud-exchange instance are configured with the dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology so that hosted virtual machines cannot be accessed or controlled through virtualization-layer administrative interfaces by the resource-provider computer system. Use of this dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology in combination with other security methods and subsystems provides an extremely robust and secure encapsulation of data and resources exchanged between resource-exchange-system participants and between the cloud-exchange system and resource-exchange-system participants. Dual-virtualization-layer-kernel technology can be used, in addition to nested-hypervisor technology, to more fully separate the above-discussed management domains. For example, cloud-exchange and resource-consumer virtual machines that run nested hypervisors may be placed under control of one of the two different virtualization-layer kernels within resource-provider servers that include dual-virtualization-layer-kernel base hypervisors, while resource-provider virtual machines are controlled to the other of the two different virtualization-layer kernels.

FIGS. 30A-B illustrate a first security issue related to nested hypervisors and an approach that addresses the first security issue. Any of a variety of data-encryption technologies can be used to secure data transmitted through networks from interception or unintentional exposure to parties unauthorized to access the data. Certain hypervisor implementations support message-data encryption and encrypted-message-data decryption in order to secure data transmitted through networks on behalf of virtual machines executing within the execution environment provided by the hypervisor. Hypervisor-implemented message-data encryption and encrypted-message-data decryption both offloads encryption/decryption tasks from virtual machines, guest operating systems, and applications running within virtual machines as well as secures and simplifies key storage and key management. In addition, encryption and decryption may be more efficient when carried out at the hypervisor level. FIGS. 30A-B use the same illustration conventions previously used in FIGS. 26-27 and assume the two different management domains discussed above with reference to FIG. 27. FIG. 30A illustrates hypervisor-level message-data encryption and encrypted-message-data decryption. In the example shown in FIG. 30A, a hardware edge gateway appliance 3002 receives encrypted data from remote devices and systems and transmits encrypted data to remote devices and systems. A virtualized gateway appliance 3004 corresponding to the physical edge gateway appliance within the hypervisor uses a symmetric key or private key to decrypt incoming encrypted data that is then forwarded to a virtual switch 3006 from which the decrypted data is distributed to the target virtual machines. In the case of first-level virtual machines that do not include nested hypervisors, such as first-level virtual machine 3008, the decrypted data is directed to the guest operating system 3010 within the virtual machine. By contrast, in the case of a first-level virtual machine that does include a nested hypervisor, such as virtual machine 3012, the decrypted data flows to the virtual edge gateway appliance 3014 within the nested hypervisor 3016 for distribution through a virtual switch 3018 to second-level virtual machines, such as second-level virtual machine 3020. As indicated in FIG. 30A, once the data leaves the virtual edge gateway appliance 3004, the data is decrypted and in clear form. Data and messages directed to a second-level virtual-machine targets running within the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor is thus internally exposed within the base hypervisor. In this sense, the first management domain corresponding to the computer system 3000 and the second management domain corresponding to the nested-hypervisor-hosting virtual machine 3012 overlap, since the management server that manages the base hypervisor 3022 can employ various tools and utilities to access decrypted message data directed to virtual machines within the second management domain. One approach to fully separating the two management domains, with respect to message-data encryption, is to configure the nested hypervisor to encrypt and decrypt message data using a nested-hypervisor-controlled key or key pair different from the key or key pair employed by the base hypervisor. However, this approach would result in significant inefficiency due to double encryption of all network traffic transmitted between virtual machines in the second management domain and remote computational entities.

FIG. 30B illustrates a more efficient approach to fully separating the two management domains with respect to message-data encryption and encrypted-message-data decryption. FIG. 30B employs simplified illustration conventions that show only the base hypervisor 3022 and the nested hypervisor 3016 rather than the full detail shown in FIG. 30A. Certain hypervisor implementations provide features that allow a virtual edge gateway appliance to be configured to selectively encrypt and decrypt network traffic depending on target address for incoming encrypted traffic and the source address for outgoing traffic. A first management server controlling the base hypervisor 3022 can be directed to configure the base hypervisor to pass incoming data directed to target entities within the second management domain, represented in FIG. 30B by the crosshatched message path 3030, to the nested hypervisor 3016 without attempting to decrypt the contents of the messages while decrypting incoming encrypted data directed to entities within the first management domain, represented in FIG. 30B by the shaded message path 3032. Message traffic directed to the second management domain therefore remains encrypted within the base hypervisor 3034 and is decrypted by the virtual edge gateway appliance 3014 within the nested hypervisor for distribution to second-level virtual machines running within the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor. Even were the base hypervisor controlled by a malicious administrator through the first management server, base-hypervisor facilities would be unable to decrypt encrypted messages directed to the second management domain, since the keys or key pairs used for encryption and decryption are held securely by the nested hypervisor, as further discussed below.

FIGS. 31A-B illustrate a second security issue related to nested hypervisors and an approach that addresses the second security issue. Like FIG. 30A, FIG. 31A uses the same illustration conventions used in FIGS. 26-27. Various types of hypervisors not only encrypt and decrypt network traffic, but also encrypt data that is output from the hypervisor and any computational entities executing in the execution environment provided by the hypervisor to data-storage devices and decrypt encrypted data retrieved from the data-storage devices. FIG. 31A illustrates encryption of data transferred to a data-storage device and decryption of stored data retrieved from the data-storage device by a hypervisor. The hardware layer 3102 of a computer system 3100 is shown to include a data-storage controller 3104 that receives data from computational entities executing above the hardware layer, transfers the data to a data-storage device 3106, retrieves data from the data-storage device on behalf of computational entities executing above the hardware layer, and transfers the retried data to requesting computational entities. In non-virtualized computer systems, the data-storage controller is directly accessed by an operating system. In a virtualized computer system, such as that shown in FIGS. 31A-B, the physical data-storage controller 3104 is accessed through a virtual data-storage controller 3106 within a base hypervisor 3108. The virtual controller 3106 encrypts data provided by higher-level computational entities for transmission to the data-storage device and decrypts encrypted data retrieved from the data-storage device on behalf of higher-level computational entities, similar to data encryption and decryption by the virtual edge gateway appliance 3004 discussed above with reference to FIG. 30A. This ensures that all of the data stored in the data-storage device on behalf of computational entities within the computer system is encrypted and protected from access by remote systems and devices. However, decrypted data is passed through the base hypervisor to first-level virtual machines, including the first-level virtual machine 3110 within which a nested hypervisor 3112 executes. The decrypted data is transmitted to a virtual controller 3114 within the nested hypervisor 3112 for distribution to second-level virtual machines. As with the physical and virtual edge gateway appliances discussed above with reference to FIG. 30A, it would be possible for the nested-hypervisor virtual controller 3114 to also encrypt and decrypt data that is transmitted to, the retrieved from, the data-storage device to ensure that a maliciously controlled base hypervisor is unable to access second-domain data, but this approach would incur significant computational overhead for double encryption and double decryption.

FIG. 31B illustrates, using the same illustration conventions used in FIG. 30B, a more efficient approach to fully separating the two management domains with respect to encryption and decryption of stored data. As with the virtual edge gateway appliance, the virtual data-storage controller 3106 within the base hypervisor 3108 can be configured to encrypt and decrypt data received from and directed to virtual machines other than the virtual machine that includes the nested hypervisor 3112 and to pass through data to and from the nested hypervisor without decryption and encryption. The data directed to the nested hypervisor from the data-storage device thus passes through the base hypervisor in encrypted form 3120 and is decrypted by the virtual controller 3114 within the nested hypervisor 3112 using a symmetric key or private key maintained only by the nested hypervisor. Similarly, data flowing from the nested hypervisor to the data-storage device is encrypted by the virtual controller 3114 of the nested hypervisor and so also passes through the base hypervisor 3120 in encrypted farm. Thus, both for network-transmitted data and for data stored to and retrieved from physical data-storage devices, proper configuration of the base hypervisor can decrease overlap in the two management domains and more fully separate the two management domains from one another.

Despite the approaches for removing overlap between the management domains discussed above with reference to FIGS. 30B and 31B, there are additional overlaps that represent significant potential security leaks. FIG. 32 illustrates one potential security leak between management domains as well as an approach to close this potential leak. FIG. 33 illustrates an approach to close a second potential security leaks between management domains discussed with reference to FIG. 33.

FIG. 32 illustrates a potential security leak between management domains associated with console functionality provided by hypervisors. FIG. 32 uses the same illustration conventions as used above in FIGS. 30 B and 31B. As discussed above, the base hypervisor 3202 is managed by a first management server 3204 and the nested hypervisor 3206 is managed by a second management server 3208. In addition, each hypervisor provides for a local console. Local console 3210 allows a privileged user to exercise full or limited local control of the base hypervisor 3202 and nested hypervisor 3206 similarly provides support for a nested-hypervisor local console 3212, although, in general, physical local consoles are not connected to nested hypervisors. However, it is theoretically possible for the base hypervisor to access management facilities provided through the local-console facilities of the nested hypervisor, since a local console can be simulated by the base hypervisor. Certain hypervisors, however, provide for a configurable lockdown-mode operational state that disables or severely limits access to the hypervisor through a local console. Lockdown-mode operation is represented, in FIG. 32, by an “X” symbol 3214. By operating nested hypervisors only in lockdown mode, the potential security leak represented by local-console facilities can be closed.

There remains a set of additional potential security leaks between management domains that is related to memory-snapshot facilities provided by hypervisors to administrators and other privileged users through the management interface provided by the management server. Memory-snapshot functionality and other such functionalities that allow the states of a hypervisor and of computational entities executing in the execution environment provided by the hypervisor to be recorded, represent a serious overlap between management domains, since the base hypervisor can be controlled to generate a memory snapshot of the nested hypervisor. This management-domain overlap, however, can be removed by using the dual-kernel hypervisor methods, described above, to place the nested hypervisor in a second management domain where the nested hypervisor cannot be controlled or operated on by the first-management-domain management server.

In a related, second scenario, a nested hypervisor controlled by the first management server is added to a cluster within the first management domain managed by the first management server. This newly added nested hypervisor appears as a peer to the first-level hypervisors already present in the cluster. The newly added nested hypervisor provides an execution environment into which first-level second-management-domain VMs managed by the cloud-exchange resource system can freely migrate as a result of automatic load balancing activity generated by VMware distributed-resource-scheduling (“DRS”) functionality or by similar technologies, exposing the second-management-domain VMs to surreptitious memory snapshots which would not ordinarily be possible were these second-management-domain VMs running on a first-level hypervisor forbidden to take such snapshots. By luring cloud-exchange VMs into a nested hypervisor controlled by the first management server via automatic DRS migrations, the restrictions provided by the above-discussed dual-kernel technology can be circumvented, allowing the first management server to carry out memory snapshots of the second-management-domain VMs through snapshot operations carried out on the newly added nested hypervisor controlled by the first management server. Thus, the first management server, or resource-provider management server, can snapshot memory contents of the second-management-domain VMs running in the execution environment provided by the newly added nested hypervisor controlled by the first management server. The second-scenario snapshot operations are more difficult to detect, since the event logs containing snapshot events would reside in the logs controlled by the first-level hypervisor, in turn controlled by the first management server, and would therefore not be visible to the owner of the cloud-exchange VMs. However, this second-scenario potential security leak can be closed by ensuring that second-management-domain VMs run exclusively on second-hypervisors.

FIG. 33 provides a control-flow diagram for a nested-hypervisor monitor that is run within the second management domain to ensure that snapshot operations representing potential security leaks to the first management domain are quickly detected. In this example, the first management domain is a resource-provider, or seller, management domain and the second management domain is a cloud-exchange management domain. The cloud-exchange system uses the cloud-exchange management domain to prevent access, by a malicious or unethical resource provider, to resource-consumer and cloud-exchange-system confidential information, including confidential data and confidential operational characteristics and states of buyer virtual machines. In step 3302, the nested-hypervisor monitor receives a description of seller computational resources incorporated into the cloud-exchange management domain, including relevant network addresses and other such information. In step 3304, the nested-hypervisor monitor accesses and examines these seller's resources to determine whether any nested hypervisors are present. When nested hypervisors are present, as determined in step 3306, the nested-hypervisor monitor returns an initial-failure indication, in step 3308. Thus, the nested-hypervisor monitor is initially called by the cloud-exchange system before cloud-exchange local-instance components or buyer virtual machines are transferred to the seller's computing facility. When no nested hypervisor is present, the nested-hypervisor monitor continues to monitor the seller's environment in the continuous loop of steps 3310-3318. In step 3310, the nested-hypervisor monitor waits for a next monitoring interval. When the next monitoring interval has arrived, the nested-hypervisor monitor, in step 3311, again examines the seller's resources to determine whether or not any nested hypervisor is present. When one or more nested hypervisors are detected, as determined in step 3312, the nested-hypervisor monitor returns a lease-period-failure indication, in step 3313. This failure indication is issued following transfer of cloud-exchange local-instance components and/or buyer virtual machines to the seller's computing facility, which may require more comprehensive ameliorative actions than required for problems for which an initial-failure indication is returned, including termination of virtual machines running on, or migration of VMs from, the seller's computing facility. Otherwise, in step 3314, the nested-hypervisor monitor accesses and examines event logs for all of the first-level hypervisors running on seller resources to identify any snapshot events performed on cloud-exchange VMs or other events that may represent security breaches. When dual-kernel-hypervisor-based management-domain separation is used, this step may be unnecessary, since the management domains are more completely separate. When any suspicious events are detected in the event logs, as determined in step 3315, a security-threat indication is returned in step 3316. Otherwise, when the nested-hypervisor monitor has been flagged for termination, due, for example, to the end of the lease period, by the cloud-exchange system, as determined in step 3317, the nested-hypervisor monitor returns a success indication, in step 3318. Otherwise, control returns to step 3310, where the nested-hypervisor monitor waits for a next monitoring interval. Of course, in alternative implementations, the nested-hypervisor monitor may continue to execute following detection of potential security breaches in order to await further instructions from the cloud-exchange system. The nested-hypervisor-monitor approach can be used to monitor the seller resources and event logs for any additional potential security leaks between management domains during the cloud-exchange-system operation. Thus, full separation of management domains is achieved by the cloud-exchange system by using hypervisor-configuration techniques, as discussed above with reference to FIGS. 30B, 31B, and 32 as well as by continuous monitoring of the resource-provider computational resources provided to the cloud-exchange system for executing cloud-exchange local-instance components and resource-consumer virtual machines. The cloud-exchange system can employ a variety of techniques to remediate or ameliorate any detected potential security leaks between management domains. When the potential security leaks are detected prior to transfer of virtual machines from the cloud-exchange system and/or from resource-consumer to the facilities to the resource-provider computing facility, the lease can be prematurely terminated. In addition, the seller can be removed from the pool of active sellers and, in severe cases, currently active leases of the resource provider's resources may be terminated. When potential security leaks that may have compromised resource-consumer confidences are detected, various resource-consumer personnel can be notified, alerts can be raised within the cloud-exchange system, the lease can be terminated, the seller can be expelled from the cloud-exchange system, and many other types of actions can be taken.

FIGS. 34A-C illustrate two additional types of resource transactions that can be carried out by the above-described cloud-exchange system in addition to simple transfer or migration of resource-consumer virtual machines to resource providers for execution within resource-provider management domains. FIG. 34A shows a simple, abstract illustration of a resource consumer, the cloud-exchange system, and a resource provider. All three of these entities are described in greater detail, above, with reference to FIGS. 1-3 and 14A-24C. The resource consumer 3402 is shown to include a number of servers, such as server 3404, interconnected by a local network 3406. The cloud-exchange system 3408 includes the various components discussed above as well as a management-server component 3410 that manages a management domain constructed using nested hypervisors, as discussed above, within the resource-provider computing facility. A management node 3412 that represents a local agent of the management server 3410 within the resource-provider computing facility 3414 is included with the local cloud-exchange-instance components discussed above.

FIG. 34B illustrates a second type of transaction between the resource consumer and the resource provider that can be brokered by the cloud-exchange system. When the resource consumer obtains, through the cloud-exchange system and the above-described auction process, resources from the resource provider for running one or more virtual machines, the cloud-exchange system launches one or more virtual machines 3420-3422 that include nested hypervisors managed by the cloud-exchange management server 3410. These virtual machines are configured by the cloud-exchange system to use the various types and quantities of resources provided by the resource provider according to the resource types and quantities agreed to in the cloud-exchange transaction, based on the buyer policies and seller policies, as discussed above. The cloud-exchange system also establishes an IPsec/L2 tunnel 3424 between the resource-consumer system and the resource-provider system in order to extend the resource-consumer's internal network to the virtual machines 3420-3422 launched on behalf of the resource consumer by the cloud-exchange system within the resource providers computing facility. This allows the cloud-exchange system to coordinate with the resource consumer to quickly and efficiently move virtual machines back and forth 3426 between the resource-consumer's computing facility and the resource-providers computing facility. Because the second-management-domain virtual machines 3420-3422 are managed by the cloud-exchange system in a separate management domain, as discussed above, the resource consumer is assured of full security of the resource consumer's data and operational-characteristics information. This is a greater level of security, in general, then provided by executing the virtual machines within resource-provider-managed computational resources, but the greater level security comes at the price of the computational overheads associated with nested hypervisors which, in turn, very much depends on the types of workloads executed within execution environments provided by nested hypervisors.

FIG. 34C illustrates a third type of transaction between the resource consumer and the resource provider that can be brokered by the cloud-exchange system. When the resource consumer 3402 requests, through the cloud-exchange system 3408 and the above-described auction process, a block of resources from the resource provider 3414, the cloud-exchange system launches one or more virtual machines 3430-3433 that include nested hypervisors managed by a management server 3436 within the resource-consumer computing facility. In this case, management of the block of resources provided by the resource provider is transferred to the management domain of the resource consumer, and the resource consumer's internal network is extended to the virtual machines through an IPsec/L2 tunnel 3438. In this case, unlike the case illustrated in FIG. 34B, the third type of transaction transfers the block of resources rather than directly providing for execution of resource-consumer virtual machines. The block of resources effectively becomes part of the resource consumer's computing facility for use, by the resource consumer, in whatever manner and when the resource consumer decides. In the second type of transaction, discussed above with reference to FIG. 34B, the virtual machines allocated by the cloud-exchange system are sized for particular virtual machines specified in advance while, in the third type of transaction, the resource consumer is free to migrate various types of virtual machines back and forth between the resource consumer's local computing facility and the computational resources leased from the resource provider.

The above-discussed cloud-exchange transaction system is accordingly modified to accommodate the second and third type of transactions. Buyer policies may include an indication of the desired transaction type or an ordered listing of the desirability of the different types of transactions. Greater attention may be needed to be paid to anti-affinity policies in order to ensure that virtual machines running nested hypervisors managed either by the cloud-exchange system or the resource consumer are distributed among physical computational resources of the resource provider to minimize the effects of physical-resource failures. In addition, additional buyer-policy parameters may be included to provide information about the needed conductivity between, and interdependencies among, the virtual machines running nested hypervisors within the resource provider's computing facility. Furthermore, the pricing associated with the different types of transactions may be based on different criteria and usage models. In the case of the third type of transaction, pricing may be based, at least in part, on a proxy virtual-machine persona rather than on the execution history or projected resource consumption of particular virtual machines. In addition, a buyer may be required to compensate the resource provider for the leased block of resources regardless of whether or not they are currently used for executing virtual machines.

FIG. 35 illustrates 4 different choices that a resource consumer may select from when faced with the need for allocating computational resources to run additional virtual machines. A first choice 3502 is to allocate the resources from local computational resources that are either currently unused or that can be physically added to the resource consumer's computational facility by purchase or lease. This first choice does not necessarily involve the cloud-exchange system, although the fact that any added computational resources can be leased through the cloud-exchange system when not needed by the resource consumer may mitigate the expenditures needed to acquire new computational resources. A second choice 3504 is to request placement of one or more virtual machines or vApps by the cloud-exchange system into remote resource-provider computing facilities under resource-provider management. This is the original type of transaction supported by the cloud-exchange system, as described above. A third choice 3506 is to request placement, through the cloud-exchange system, of one or more VMs and/or vApps into virtual machines running nested hypervisors controlled by the cloud-exchange system via the second type of transaction, discussed above with reference to FIG. 34B. Finally, a fourth choice 3508 is to request allocation, through the cloud-exchange system, of a block of resources from one or more resource providers using the third type of transaction, discussed above with reference to FIG. 34C.

There are many different considerations related to selecting one or more of the four different approaches illustrated in FIG. 35. These considerations are weighed by the buyer, or resource consumer, when developing a buyer policy, but may also be automatically weighed by the cloud-exchange system on behalf of the resource consumer, when the buyer policy indicates that two or more of the approaches would be acceptable to the buyer. The first approach 3502 generally provides the greatest security of buyer data and other information that can be discerned from operational characteristics of the buyer's virtual machines, although this apparent security is dependent on the security measures implemented within the buyer's computing facility. When there is excess capacity within the buyer's computational facility, the first approach may also be least costly and most efficient, although, in certain cases, it may actually be cheaper for the buyer to lease the excess capacity through the cloud-exchange system to remote resource consumers and to lease more suitable computational resources from remote resource providers for execution of the buyer's virtual machines or vApps. Furthermore, when the buyer's VMs and/or vApps are expected to need additional computational resources for only a relatively short period of time, the transaction costs associated with leasing remote resources through the cloud-exchange system may offset relatively temporary advantages obtained by leasing the needed computational resources from remote resource providers. Additional factors that may be considered are the overheads associated with executing the buyer's VMs and/or vApps remotely. For example, when the buyer's VMs and/or vApps exchange data through networks at relatively high rates with entities resident within the buyer's computational facility or with remote third parties, the costs and potential lag times associated with exchanging the data with remote entities from a resource providers computational facility may offset cost advantages of leasing resources through the cloud-exchange system. The second approach 3504 may be cost efficient and may also be computationally efficient for certain types of the VMs and/or vApps, but, when the buyer has significant security concerns, the second approach maybe undesirable. While there are many measures that can be taken to decrease the likelihood that a resource provider can intentionally or inadvertently access buyer's data or monitor the operational characteristics of the buyer's VMs and/or vApps, it may not be possible to decrease the likelihood of resource-provider access below an acceptable probability threshold and the security measures may be associated with their own costs and inefficiencies, including installation, configuration, verification, and monitoring costs. The third approach 3506 generally provides greater security to the buyer with respect to intentional or inadvertent access to buyer data and with respect to the confidential operational characteristics of the buyer's VMs and/or vApps, but may be associated with significant computational overheads due to nested-hypervisor execution. In particular, transferring network data through multiple layers of virtual edge gateway appliances and virtual switches may incur significant computational overheads above the overheads associated with data transfer between the resource consumer's computational facility and the resource provider's computing facility. Similarly, virtual machines that run applications that frequently access operating-system services or that output large amounts of data to data-storage devices and that retrieve large amounts of data from the data-storage devices may incur significant additional computational overheads in nested-hypervisor-provided execution environments. The fourth approach 3508 may be perceived by a buyer to offer greater security than the second and third approaches and may also provide greater operational flexibility to a resource consumer, since the block of resources allocated from the resource provider can be viewed as an extension of the buyers computing facility that is less burdened with usage constraints and offers seamless capacity management within a unified logical resource cluster managed by the resource consumer. However, the fourth approach shares the potential for computational inefficiency with the third approach due to execution of the buyer's VMs and/or vApps in a nested-hypervisor environment. Furthermore, the buyer may end up paying larger fees per unit of computational resource for blocks of resources allocated from the resource providers computational facility than for leasing the ability to execute particular virtual machines with well-defined usage profiles within a resource providers computational facility. The above-mentioned considerations are merely examples of the many considerations and parameters involved in selection, by a buyer or by the cloud-exchange system, of an approach for acquiring needed computational resources by a buyer for executing the buyer's VMs and/or vApps.

FIGS. 36A-E illustrate an additional advantage associated with the use of nested hypervisors by the cloud-exchange system. As discussed above, the cloud-exchange system includes a cloud-exchange engine and local cloud-exchange instances in both buyer and seller computing facilities. The use of nested hypervisors can facilitate installation of cloud-exchange instances buyer and seller computing facilities. FIG. 36A shows a cloud-exchange system 3602 and a resource-provider computing facility 3604. For this example, it is assumed that the seller computing facility 3604 has recently successfully registered with the cloud-exchange system and the cloud-exchange system needs next to install a local cloud-exchange instance within the seller computing facility. In a non-nested-hypervisor approach, the cloud-exchange system needs to receive information on the resources allocated by the seller for the local cloud-exchange instance, transfer virtual machines corresponding to the various local cloud-exchange-instance components to the seller computing facility, and configure and launch the virtual machines. This approach is time-consuming, involves numerous steps, and generally involves many different considerations and decisions. In the currently described approach, as illustrated in FIG. 36A, the cloud-exchange system is provided computational resources by the seller computing facility, represented as shaded portions 3606-3607 of two server computers 3608-3609 within the seller computing facility 3604. The cloud-exchange system then launches one or more virtual machines running nested hypervisors and establishes an IP sec/L2 tunnel to these virtual machines in order to extend the cloud-exchange internal network to include the virtual machines. Finally, the cloud-exchange system runs a configuration executable that carries out any additional configuration tasks needed to complete the local-cloud-exchange-instance installation. The number and types of virtual machines, relationships and interdependencies between the virtual machines, and general configuration of the virtual machines has been previously determined and encoded in the OVA file or other vehicle by which the one or more virtual machines running in nested hypervisors are transferred from the cloud-exchange system to the seller computing facility, greatly simplifying the installation process. In addition, all of the above-mentioned security features inherent in nested-hypervisor implementations are obtained by the cloud-exchange system, ensuring a secure and complete separation between the local cloud-exchange instance and other entities resident within the seller computing facility.

FIGS. 36B-D illustrate construction and packaging of the local cloud-exchange instance for efficient installation within resource-consumer and resource-provider computing facilities. As shown in FIG. 36B, an overall architecture 3610 for the local cloud-exchange instance is first developed. This includes full descriptions of each of the local-cloud-exchange-instance components 3611-3616, including the configuration parameters associated with each of the local-cloud-exchange-instance components 3617-3622, and a description of the nested hypervisor 3623 and the configuration parameters associated with the nested hypervisor 3624. As indicated by inset 3626, the configuration parameters associated with the nested hypervisor and local-cloud-exchange-instance components are partitioned into a set of environment-dependent parameters 3628 and a set of environment-independent parameters 3629. The environment-dependent parameters refer to configuration parameters that can be assigned values only when the identity and description of the resource-consumer or resource-provider computing facility, in which installation of the local cloud-exchange instance is to be installed, is known, but the environment-independent parameters can be assigned values in advance of local-cloud-exchange-instance installation. Next, as shown in FIG. 36C, the various local-cloud-exchange-instance components and guest operating systems are assigned to virtual machines 3630-3634 which are each associated with the environment-independent configuration parameters for the components assigned to the virtual machine. Then, as illustrated in FIG. 36D, the relationships and interdependencies between the local-cloud-exchange-instance components are identified and characterized, as represented in FIG. 36D by double-headed arrows between discs representing the components 3640, and these relationships and interdependencies are used to complete specification of the configurations of the one or more virtual machines containing nested hypervisors. Finally, the order for launching and terminating the virtual machines is defined and encoded for use by the nested hypervisor. The fully characterized one or more virtual machines with nested hypervisors that implement the local cloud-exchange instance are encoded in an OVA file 3642 or in an alternative transmission vehicle and a configuration process, or executable, is developed 3644 to carry out post-launch environment-dependent configuration of the local cloud-exchange-instance virtual machines. This process may involve actually developing, launching, and configuring the one or more virtual machines by the cloud-exchange systems and then encapsulated the one or more virtual machines in an OVA file. However, the OVA file is prepared, the combination of the OVA file and the configuration executable provide an efficient and straightforward local-cloud-exchange-instance installation and launching process.

FIG. 36E provides a control-flow diagram for the above-described nested-hypervisor-based local-cloud-exchange-instance-installation process. In step 3650, the process receives a description of the cloud-exchange participant into which a local cloud-exchange instance is to be installed. In step 3652, the process receives a set of participant-specific configuration parameters. In step 3654, the process deploys the pre-constructed OVA file to the participant computing facilities. In step 3656, configurations for the nested hypervisors in the one or more first-level virtual machines are determined and, in step 3658, these virtual machines are launched, after which the second-level virtual machines that run in the execution environments provided by the nested hypervisors are launched. In step 3660, the configuration process is executed to carry out participant-specific configuration of the first-level and second-level virtual machines. In step 3662, the process verifies the installation. When the verification succeeds, as determined in step 3664, the installation process completes. Otherwise, one or more error handlers 3666 are called to handle errors and problems associated with the installation. When the errors are problems are satisfactorily resolved, as determined in step 3668, control returns to the appropriate point in the installation process to resume installation, as represented by the curved arrow 3670. Otherwise, the installation process has been backed out by the error handler and installation process terminates.

Although the present invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments, it is not intended that the invention be limited to these embodiments. Modifications within the spirit of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, many different design and implementation parameters can be varied to produce alternative implementations, including choice of operating system, the hardware platforms and virtualization layers that are controlled by the distributed service-based application, modular organization, control structures, data structures, and other such parameters. There are many different types of hypervisors and management servers, and there are therefore many different possible approaches to effecting separate management domains within a computing facility using nested hypervisors in addition to those discussed above. These many different possible approaches may be employed, in alternative implementations, to create separate cloud-exchange and/or resource-consumer management domains within resource-provider computing facilities.

It is appreciated that the previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present disclosure. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the disclosure. Thus, the present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein. 

1. An automated resource-exchange system comprising: multiple resource-exchange-system participants, including resource consumers and resource providers, that each includes multiple server computers, each having one or more processors and one or more memories, and includes a local cloud-exchange instance; and a cloud-exchange system that is implemented on one or more physical server computers, each including one or more processors and one or more memories, includes a cloud-exchange engine, and automatically brokers and carries out transactions in each of which a resource consumer requests to lease computational resources from one or more resource providers, the cloud-exchange system selects one or more resource providers from among the resource-exchange-system participants to lease the computational resources to the resource consumer, and the cloud-exchange system arranges for use of the leased computational resources by the resource consumer by coordinating launching one or more virtual machines within each of the computing facilities of the one or more selected resource providers, each virtual machine executing a nested hypervisor that provides an execution environment for one or more computational entities.
 2. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 1 wherein, in addition to launching the one or more virtual machines, the cloud-exchange system arranges for use of the leased computational resources by the resource consumer by extending an internal network within the resource-consumer's computing facility to the one or more virtual machines by creating one or more secure communications tunnels between the one or more virtual machines and the internal network.
 3. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 1 wherein the nested hypervisors executing in the one or more virtual machines are controlled by a management server within the cloud-exchange system to create a cloud-exchange management domain within each of the computing facilities of the one or more selected resource providers.
 4. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 3 wherein, in the transaction in which the one or more virtual machines are launched, the resource consumer requested to lease computational resources to run a set of one or more particular computational entities, and the one or more virtual machines are configured to provide the computational resources to run the one or more particular computational entities.
 5. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 1 wherein the nested hypervisors executing in the one or more virtual machines are controlled by a management server within the resource consumer's computing facility to create a resource-consumer management domain within each of the computing facilities of the one or more selected resource providers.
 6. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 5 wherein, in the transaction in which the one or more virtual machines are launched, the resource consumer requested to lease a block of computational resources, and the one or more virtual machines are configured to provide the requested block of computational resources to the resource consumer to use at the resource consumer's discretion.
 7. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 1 wherein each nested hypervisor runs within an execution environment provided by a base hypervisor controlled by a management server within the resource provider's computing facility in which the nested hypervisor executes, the base hypervisor configured to provide separate management domains for the base hypervisor and the nested hypervisor.
 8. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 7 wherein the nested hypervisor and base hypervisor that provides the execution environment for the nested hypervisor are configured so that, for network traffic flowing to the nested hypervisor from a network and for network traffic emanating from source entities executing in the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor, the network traffic passes through the base hypervisor in encrypted form so that the base hypervisor cannot access the contents of the messages that together comprise the network traffic.
 9. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 7 wherein the nested hypervisor and base hypervisor that provides the execution environment for the nested hypervisor are configured so that, for data flowing to the nested hypervisor from data-storage devices and for data transmitted to data-storage devices from source entities executing in the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor, the data passes through the base hypervisor in encrypted form so that the base hypervisor cannot access the data.
 10. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 1 wherein the cloud-exchange system monitors the one or more virtual machines to detect potential security leaks.
 11. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 10 wherein the cloud-exchange system detects exposure of nested-hypervisor memory or state by examining logged events maintained in hypervisor logs to identify logged events corresponding to potential access to nested-hypervisor memory or state.
 12. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 10 wherein the cloud-exchange system detects exposure of memory or state of resource consumer VMs by examining the resource provider's hypervisor to determine whether or not any of the resource consumer's VMs are executing in execution environments provided by resource-provider-managed nested hypervisors.
 13. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 1 wherein each local cloud-exchange instance is installed in a resource-provider computing facility as a virtual machine running a nested hypervisor controlled by a cloud-exchange-system management server and multiple second-level virtual machines running in the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor.
 14. The automated resource-exchange system of claim 13 wherein environment-specific configurations of the virtual machine running a nested hypervisor controlled by a cloud-exchange-system management server are carried out by an automated process invoked by the cloud-exchange system following launching of the virtual machine within the resource-provider computing facility.
 15. A method that creates two management domains within a resource-exchange-system-participant computing facility of an automated resource-exchange system, the method comprising: launching, by a cloud-exchange system implemented on one or more physical server computers, one or more virtual machines within each of the computing facilities of one or more resource providers selected by the cloud-exchange system to provide computational resources to a resource consumer, each virtual machine executing in an execution environment provided by a base hypervisor controlled by a resource-provider management server, the execution environment supporting a nested hypervisor controlled by a management sever external to the resource-provider computing facility; and configuring the base hypervisor to maintain the base hypervisor in a resource-provider control domain separate from the control domain that includes the nested hypervisor and external management server.
 16. The method of claim 15 wherein the nested hypervisor and base hypervisor are configured so that, for network traffic flowing to the nested hypervisor from a network and for network traffic emanating from source entities executing in the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor, the network traffic passes through the base hypervisor in encrypted form so that the base hypervisor cannot access the contents of the messages that together comprise the network traffic.
 17. The method of claim 15 wherein the nested hypervisor and base hypervisor are configured so that, for data flowing to the nested hypervisor from data-storage devices and for data transmitted to data-storage devices from source entities executing in the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor, the data passes through the base hypervisor in encrypted form so that the base hypervisor cannot access the data.
 18. The method of claim 15 further including installing, by the cloud-exchange system, a local cloud-exchange instance in a resource-provider computing facility as a virtual machine running a nested hypervisor controlled by a cloud-exchange-system management server and multiple second-level virtual machines running in the execution environment provided by the nested hypervisor.
 19. The method of claim 18 wherein environment-specific configurations of the virtual machine running a nested hypervisor controlled by a cloud-exchange-system management server are carried out by an automated process invoked by the cloud-exchange system following launching of the virtual machine within the resource-provider computing facility.
 20. A physical data-storage device encoded with computer instructions that, when executed by processors with an automated resource-exchange system comprising multiple resource-exchange participants and a cloud-exchange system, control the automated resource-exchange system to create two management domains within a resource-exchange-system-participant computing facility, the method comprising: launching, by the cloud-exchange system, one or more virtual machines within each of the computing facilities of one or more resource-exchange-system resource-provider participants selected by the cloud-exchange system to provide computational resources to a resource-exchange-system resource-consumer participant, each virtual machine executing in an execution environment provided by a base hypervisor controlled by a resource-exchange-system-resource-provider-participant management server, the execution environment supporting a nested hypervisor controlled by a management sever external to the resource-exchange-system-resource-provider-participant computing facility; and configuring the base hypervisor to maintain the base hypervisor in a resource-provider control domain separate from the control domain that includes the nested hypervisor and external management server. 